HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-09-25 - Orange Coast Pilotc•1111111
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TUfSl>AV, !-.t PTI MBER 'J'J . 1984
-~ry·s Mesa to file amphitheater suit COMING! ..
Inmate
torches
Manson
VACAVIL
LE (AP) -
Mau killer
Charle•
M~n1on
W a I
drenched
With paint
thinner and
1et afire
today by a
fellow In-
mate who
told guards
Manson had threat.ied him
beclU98 of his religloua bellefa,
llUthOtttlel aald.
Manion, aervlng a llfe
Mntence for tt\e cuh llaylng1 of
ectresa Sharon Tate and ~ht
othera, wu treated for eeconc:t-
and third-degree burna In the
prlsOn lnflmlan' and wu In QOOd
condition, 1ald Bob Gore,
spokesman for the 1tate Correc-
tlona Department.
MaMon, 48, was In the hobby
lhOp of the CalHornla Medlcal = the 1tate'1 prlson for trlc Pf'laonerl, wtMtf'I the
other Inmate, a member of the
H81e Krllhna eect eervtng a
aentencefor murder, doused him
wtth flammable liquid and aet him
afire, Gore said. Manson euf-
fered burna over 18 percent of his
body, concentrated on his face,
acalp and hand1, In the 8:45 a.m.
attack, ·oor•iald.
Nation
Manhunt continues for
five escaped Kansas
State Penitentiary con-
victs./ Al
World
Tass llkens Reagan's
arms talk to a •vessel
without water.' I A4
Mlild&:BOdy
New devices used to
amplify or substitute for
sound are Improving
therapy for the hearing
lmpalred./81
Spom
Newport Harbor' a Ho
Truong has been chosen
as the Dally Piiot's Player
of the Week for his part In
tie with Huntington
Beach./C1
INDEX
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bunetln Board
8ullMll
Callfotnla News
Claulfled
Comlcl
Croaword
OMth Notlcel
Horoecope
Annl.:and ..
Mind and BoOy
Mutual Fun<te
Natlonal Newt
Opinion ..
~= PObllc)Nottc..
Spana
Stack Markets
T~ Theltert
Wtllthtt • •
World News
82
88
A3
84-e
A4
C6-8
88
C8
C5
C7
82
81·2
88
A4
A7
81
A3
CM
C1..S
87
82
83
A.2
A4
Action also seeks restraint order
to force arena to obey city noise.law
87 TONY SAA VEORA
Ot!M ........ ewt
The city of Costa Mesa was
expected to file a lawsuit today in an
effort to permanently close the
18,()()().ica.t Pacific Amphitheatre~
cause of repeated complaints by
nearby homco'Wllers over noise from
rock concerts. •
Mayor Donn Hall •id tbis morn·
ing that the suit. to be filed in Oranae
County Superior Coutt in Santa Ana.
Aerobics?. It'• a real drag
Wlaen tbe 11.,sc llOftllleat Shape Up <:enter ID co.ta 11 ..
held a 0 tac9 aerobic wear ppty" lloadu Ql6.t._ Bill
Da.nlap of COllta lleM tOoJr. them attbelrword. Tlieiciia wu
would a.I.lo for a CcmPom')'
restraln1n1 order forcing 1he
amphitheater 'o abide by the cit~s
nollC ordinance.
He said the lcpl action would be
made a1 a cross-complaint in rcsPonst to a suit filed by
amphitheater owner Ned-West, Inc.
Titc company alJese.s in iu suit that
the citfs onhnance is unconstitional pecau~ it is aimed solely at the
outdoor concen arena at the Oranac
Florida's citrus pestilence
worries California growers
OC agttculture officials keeping close watch
for signs the fruit tree killer is moving west
From ataff aDd wire rt)IOrt•
A citrus disease that is decimating
nurseries in F1orid3 has never been
found in California and teps arc bcina taken to make sure the
pestilence doesn't move west.
"There is a real concern it might
come this way," said Jim Harnett. an
agriculture commissioner in Orange
County.
"We don't need any more diseases
out here and particularly one we don't
know anythin& about. .. said Hamett.
.. lt could be a major problem if it got
here."
Orange Co!1nty, livina up to its
namesake, is nch m orange producing
acreage. There are more than S,200
acres planted in orange trees, nearly
900 acres of lemons and more than
300 acres of trees producina
grapefruit.
The disease plaguina F1orida fruit
growers is known as citru.s Canker,
which attacu the leaves of fruit·
bearina 'trees. Growers in F1orida
have been ~entire ortb&rds to
eliminate the pestilence .
The catifornia Department of
Agriculture Monday dispitched five
plant patbolosists to F1orida to help
authorities detect and eradicate the
citrus canker, which could cripple or
kill the state's citrus crop.
(Pleue Me CITRUS/ A2)
Newportfirm's·herpes drug
~y hit ffiarket in two years_
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN under the name lsoprinosine in 72 gynecoloCY at UCJ.
0t-.D1111J ..... •• · countries includina Great Britain. AIDS. a fatal .. malady thit sup-
A Newpon Beach com~ny that France and Wellt Germany. pres5C$ the body's immune system,
markets the drua_ inosjplex outside Today's repon on the drua was has killed 2, 70S people in the United
tlie nat States hopes to put iton-made at a sympO aum n herpes lllltt-States, most -of-them.-bomoscxual -
domestic phannacy shelvei after AIDS durina which Dr. R. David natives of Haiti, intravenous drua
.studies showed "encouraaina" results Miller, who co-directed the UCI abusers and hemophiliacs. · ·
·in treatina herpes and an affii:tfon herpes study, pre~nted hi tesr -Herpes is not fatal but is spread
limilar to AIDS. results. ea~ )ear to huodmi ofthousandsof
The herpes tud)' was done by UC Or. Millerisdirtttorofthe divmon new victim mostly by sexual contact.
Irvine researdlcrs. of infectious disease in UCl's Depart-It causes outbrea of ~Dful SOre5
Newpon Pharmaceuticals lntC'r-ment of Obstetrics and GynecolOI)'. and affccu up to 20 million Ameri-
nalional, Inc., announced today in His partner in dircetina the study was cans, acconhn& to the Center for
London the results of rccient tests of Or. William H. Wickett Jr., asslstant Disease Control in Atlanta.
the drug. which is "11d primarily clinic:al pro~sor of obstetrics and (Pl-..e eee llBR.P&S/A2)
. .
Getting high on the seq_s
n~t like drunken driving . .
Newport Harbor 'crulstn and boozfn '
ftcr 1\ 1S the
Cowity FIUJl:Oundl. facility. A Utl Qlltl5t the couaty ~a1yalidtbcamplulheatcrbave fairvounds the am~tbeatd•
been feudina 11nce 0e facility opened · IAndlotd. ·was ~ an Superior
in the •ummer of 1983 Tbt dilputc: Court. The other awt. ~ ~
has led to three criminal complaints West, ,.... filed luc wciei 'by aew:a
by the c11y apinst Ned-West this year homcownm.
for allqedly V'iolatial local n01se For iinsunee; a recent conca1 by
limits. One misdemeaiior complaint lbe Prc1mden new wave ~ was rejecied by a rnu1UC1pal coun provoked I 03 aoue complaiata 8-
j\Jdae, two others are pcnd1na, rcsidenu livana ~ far nonh or die
· Meanwhile, two homeowner suiu facility as Paularino A venue and ..
havebeenfUedinconnectionwiththe far south as 21st treet.
STEVE
luau
PlR SPfC.fl\!
EX-cop
sued
in sex .
request
HB woman claims
reserve officer
tried blackmail
BJ TONY S.U YEDllA °' .. ...,....... .
MoreoomJJlaints maybe added to a
fedetaJ suit filed . by a former Hunt-
inaton Bcadt woman .Wt the city or· Costa Mesa and an cx-f'CICf'Ve
police officer wbo tbe woman claims
offered to .,:l I dnln'ktn dri Y:ina cbar&e • mt her dismissed if lbe would ~; .. perlonaJ relations" with
him. ' NeWs>on Bcadl attorney Ricbir4
RtpiCi said he is continuins a private investiption into tht a1Jqed buns;
ment Of Bonita Lynn µ,pdoa by
former reserve officer MiCbad
Thayer. That in,·cstiption, said b
plci, could leacfto more civil cha.rFI IPinst the dty and the ex-officer,
Who formerly was aiailcr Ytilh the Los An&des O>unty Sheriff's Depan-
meut.
l..oDdon llrcady bas accused them in a laWs\Jit filed last week in U.S.
District Coun of violatins her con-
ltitutiomd risht 10 PllVICY u wd1 as
berrigbt to due process under the law.
(B,1 -M ... U..QOP/A2)
Freeway
smashup
hurts two
l
1
•
I
*llOt•IOt Cpaat DAIL'f PILOT/Tunday, Sap\-.nber 25. 9M
Disne land workers strike;
A1 att4 Pr
D1sn~y~nd "' struck b more
than t ,800 of its .S,000 worker rt)
tQday afltr members of five union
rtJCCtcd a new contl'1lCt offer. but
management id the ~k wuutd
• connnut operating.
The trike was called t 6 a.m. and
pickets went up immediately, said
: union SPolesman Bob Bleiweiss. •
"The purpose of the strike is not to
strike. but to act back to ncgo.
• tiations," he 68id. "They'll be picket-
ing 24 boun a day."
Discussions w1th the com~ny
broke 1otT around midnight and
workers were ad~ised to rcPon to
picket locations at entran~ and exits
to the amu ment park.
But a Disneyland SPok~man said
the park's 10 a.m. openina today
• woufd not be delayed b> the trike.
~ .. We're ready to JO." said AJ Ao res,
upcrvisdr of publicity.
• The park ha a pool of 1,400 non-
• union employees, including super-
; visory personnel and clerks, and
several hundred additional workers
from WED Enterprises. a design
· division of Walt Disney Productions,
and a imilar number from Disney's
studio in Burbank, Aores said.
"Everybody has been trained.
Everybody bas met the mmimum
requirement for traini~ on attrac-
uons, which is two days,' Aorcs said.
Huntingtt>n Beach resident
Sharlene Vandcr Molen, a non-union
employee who works in Disneylancfs
entenainment department, said she
and other workers have been receiv-
ing tramina to take over for strikers.
.. I'U be seUinf merchandise m
Fantasyland," wd Vander Molen,
who norinally dresses in custume and
plays the role of a Disney canoon
character. She said company rules
Haa the MaglQ: ~lrlgdom IOtt
Its magic? See story on A8
prohibit her from AYlll
character he plays.
She said she 1s not worried aoout
crossing p~let lin~.
"But 1 haven't done it >Ct either,"
she added.
~ he supc~ 1sory pcrsonntl were
dmwn rom 14of:17diva ionaloffi
in nd behind the rs t the park.
Those office) wert to be closed, w h1ch
:.vould affect planninJ if the trike
wert drawn out, be said.
Contrary to &0me mc01a reports,
there were no plans to bring in
tmployees from Dlsnnworld in
Florida or Tokyo's Disneyland,
Aorcssaid.
L~guna alien robbed
twice by escort service
BJ DAVID BISHOP
DelfNetCen11J1.-...11
Laguna Beach police are investigat-
ing a Santa Ana escort 'ICf"ice that
allegedly twice robbed a man who
initially was too afraid to repon the
crimes.
A male Mexican, an un-
documented worker, who lives in a
small apartment on Griffith Way in
La&una. called the escort service -
befievcd to be a front for prostitution
-to invite a woman to his residence
on Sept. 17, Sgt. Alex Jimenez said.
Shortly after the woman left, two
black men Showed up at the semi·
secluded apartment and took $350 in
ca"sh from the MeJUcan at gunp()int,
Jimenez.
The victim. in his mid-20s, did not
rePort the crime because be feared
dcPortation, Jimenez said.
A week after the first incident the
man called the escort service apin
aod asked for two call-airls this nme.
They arrived Monday afternoon.
Later that night two black men armed
with guns amvcd while the women
wert still inside with the victim. This
time. they took S 150 in cash, which 1~
all the man said ·he bad, and bis
television 5Ct.
.. To make it look good, they said
they were taking the girls aJor\g and
would dump them off by tbe side of
the freeway," Jiminez said. The
Mexican later told police one of the
black men was also involved in the
earlier burglary, he added.
Police first learned of the robbery
when the victim's landlord reponed
it.
The victim, who has worked in a
Laguna Beach restaurant for about a ·
year, 1s now cooperating with police
in the investigation.
The Mexican still docs not believe
there is a connection between the call
&iris and the robbers, Jiminez said.
although police arc aJmost certain
they arc linked.
The investigation is centered on
several Santa Ana telephone
numben, Jimenez said.
EX-COP FACES SEX SUIT •••
From Al
Repici said the 25-year-old woman
was repeatedly telephoned by Thayer
after he helped a regular officer arTCSt
her on a charae of drunken driving in
December.
"He basically said, 'Go out with
me; carry on personal relations with
me and 1 won't appear (in coun) on
the case."' said Repici, who tape-
rccorded -with the consent of the
district attorney's office -one of the
officer's calls.
The suit docs not specify a monet-
ary damages.. but the woman had
previously filed a SJ million claim
asa:inst the city. The city denied the
claim;
Thedrunk.endrivingchargcagainst
the woman was dropped in January.
However, Logsdon was forced to
move several times out of fear that
local pohce would try to retaliate
against her, said Repaci, who added
the woman still lives in Orange
County.
Thayer, facing disciplinary action
from the police department, resigned
from his part-time JOb in January,
said Police Chief Roger Neth.
"I probably would have terminated
him an~y," said Neth. He added
that cnminal charges were never
brought against Thayer because dis-
trict attorney's investiptors con-
cluded there was insufficient
evidence.
The alleged harassment by Thayer
was followed by a similar case
involvina another Costa Mesa police
officer, William Lauchlan, who was
fired and later convicted on charges
that be molested a woman motorist
he had puUcd over in January.
CITRUS KILLER IN FLORIDA •.•
From Al
Meanwhile, a federal quarantine
now prevents ship of Aorida citrus
out of that state.
When some citrus areas arc found
free of canker, shipments still will be
banned to other citrus producing
states such as Calif omia, says Arthur
A. Millccan. chief of the state Oepan-
ment of Food and Agncuhure pest
exclusion unit.
"Our 16 border stations have been
aJerted to keep a special watch for
citrus fruit or plants that mifbt be
brought into the state by visitors,''
Millccan said. "We have aJways had
the Policy of restricting such ~on-
commerciaJ entry of most fruits and
vegetables, as anyone who has ever
tried to bring these items through our
stations can attest."
Millccan said that the quarantine
docs not apply to such processed
citrus byproducts as frozen of bulk
juice.
HERPES DRUG SET FOR MARKET? •••
From Al '"'
Jn a statement released by the
untvers1ty, Miller said, "The drug
rcprcstnts a partial ans~ but not a
cure for the management ofberpes."
Also present in London was San-
ford Glasky, executJvc vice president
of Newport Pharmaceuticals. Glasky
said be hopes the test results will help
win approval for the druJ from the
U.S. Food and Drua Admmistration.
The tests provide new findings
about the effectJvcness of inosiplex
"m prolonging the perioos between
recurrences bf herpes," Glasky said.
Luana Kruse, a spokeswoman for
Newport Pharmaceuticals, said today
that the company is preparing its
application for FDA approval of
lnosiplex as a treatment for herpes.
Because of the Jen~y FDA review
process, she said ·conservatively,"
the drug could be available to the
public in two years.
She said the company applied to
the FDA in 1974-75 but lacked the
necessary scientific data. She said the
company hopes the UCI results wilJ
help them win approval this time.
The six-month UCI study involved
76 men and women who had suffered
at least three outbreaks of genital
herpes over the previous sut months.
The experiment was double-blind,
meaninJ neither the researchers nor
the ~tJents knew who was taking
inos1plex and who was taking a
placebo during the study.
At the end of six months, 51
percent of those who took the drug
reported having one or no outbreaks.
Only 19 percent of those who took the
placebo reported similar improve-
ments. At the same time, more of the
placebo takers reported "severe''
outbrcaJcs of herpes during the study
period.
Beyond the herpes expenment, a
second test produced "encouragina
results" on people whose depressed
immune systems make them suscep-
tible to AIDS -acquired immune
deficiency syndrome -said Dr.
Sudhir Gupta. head of immunology
at UC lrvme.
A company spokesman said more
research must be conducted before
the firm will seek FDA approval for
use of inosiplex in AIDS cases.
lnosiplex is lt<:enscd in Great Britain
for use against herpes and in France
and West Germany for immuno-
deficiencies, Glasky said.
Glasky said Newp0n Pharma-
ceuticals has not shown a profit since
ats founding in 1968 and bas spent
some S l S million on research and
development of inosiplex.
However, rep()ns of the UCI study
have dramatically increased interest
in the company's, the stock nearly
doubling in the pa.st 10 days. On
Mond.ay. 1t closed at $7 a share, with
490,000 shares traded.
SMASHUPHUR1'S TWO .•.
The company says the drug
enhances the body's defense systems
by increasing production of anti·
bodies and the migration of
pha4ocytes, both of wti1cb destro)
forctP.t substances in the body. It also
is said to enable killer cells to more
readily identify infected cells and
destroy them.
From Al
from a shoulder of the freeway. tractor-trall 1d police. -
The jeep was rear-ended by another
car and shoved into the side of a large
No further mformation was avail-
able this morning.
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ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwertz Ill
Publisher
Rosemary Churchm•n
Contrail r
Stephen F. Carazo
Production
Manager
Donetd L. Wllll•m•
C1rcu1aoon
Manag r -------t
Clrculetlon 714/"2-4333
ct .. •lfled .Sv•rll•lng 714/142·5811
All olhef department• 142""'321
MAJN OFFICE .
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DRINKING.YACHTSMEN 'NO PROBLEM' •••
From Al
acc1dents involvina drugs or alcohol,
some suspect it's as high as a thrcc-
manini lunch.
Lynn Hornberger of the ·state
Department of Boating and Water-
ways says state officials estimate that
at least SO percent of all boating
accidents are alcohol related. ·
By contrast. Police estimated that
nearly 60 percent of the fatal car
accidents across the country can be
directly attnbuted to drunken driv-
in&. About 50,000 people arc killed
each year .on the nation's highways.
"In boating (accidents), reporting
standards arc son of loose so it's bard
to determine what percent of the
accidents involve alcohol. But our
feclin& is that a great many of the
operators are pretty messed up," says
Marc Sanchez, senior a.adc to San
Diego Assemblyman Peter Chacon.
Chacon, a Democrat, sponsored
leaislation last year that would
toughen laws relating to dnnking and
boa tint ._
The ill. rewritten because it was at
first considered too controversial,
resulted in what is to be a two-year
stud~ on boating accidents by the
state s boating and waterways depart-
ment.
"It basically requires local law
enforcement aaencies to collect and
report data on accidents as it relates to
alcohol and to the age of the boat.er,"
explains Sanchez.
· "If the data comes back showing
that young people a.re involved in a
lot of boattng accidents, there will
probably be a bill for licensing, just
like with cars.
''lf it comes back and shows that
aJcohol is involved to the d~ we
suspect it is, perhaps there will be a
bill authorizina the suspension or Joss
of a boating license in certain cases,"
says Sanchez.
Boaters now are not required to be
licensed.
The Jaw also calls for a $500 fine for
reek.less operation of a boat if the
operator is intoxicated. It aJso aJlows
a S l ,000 fine if the violator is
convicted a second time and if the
second offense results in a serious
injury or death.
Harbormaster GaJC aarccs there is
a drinking-and-boat1na problem, but
believes it is beina overstated in some
quarters.
"Some. person lacking a boat may
have stopped off at a happy hour on
the way home, but that doesn't mean
he's drunk." Gage says. "The same's
true with a guy who takes out his boat
and has a beer."
Gage cautions that the harbor
patrol is not complacent about drink-
ll)g and boating and will arrest
violators. Ao intoxicated operator is
treated much the same as the drunken
dnver.
A field sobriety test is conducted
and if the operator is arrested, the
harbor patrol can impound the
boater's vessel. More often, thouah, a
crew member judged to be sober is
aUowcd to take the Do&t back to dock.
"A great many of our enforcement
otJicers have street experience so they
know what the problems arc," Gage
says.
An inherent problem with sPotting
drunken boaters is that it's sometimes
difficult to distinguish the yachtsman
who's three sheets to the wind from
the inexperienced boater who is just
weaving his way around.
According to the harbor patrol,
which also oversees boatina oper-
ations in Dana Point Harbor and
Huntington Harbor, there is an ocean
of difference between the harbors on
the Orange Coast and the speed boat
hangouts like Mission Bay or Lake
Havasu.
Last )'cat on the Colorado River
there were 20 ..fatalities. In an ave~
year, there arc 1 SO boat accidents and
about 10 deaths on the river, accord-
ing to Parker Dam Sherifrs deputy
Roben Baldwin.
"We just don't have that clement of
speed here," says Gage. "Plus there
arc so many people here with boats
worth a quarter of a million dollars
that they will be more careful."
"The boat," he says, 0 is their one
true love and they don't wanttocrack
it up .. "
invites you to celebrate witla us in our
8TH ANNUAL OPEN HOUSE PARTY
SEPTEMBER 26th
7 :00 P .M. to 10:00 P.M.
JOIN THE CELEBRATION
NSC'• traditional OPEN HOUSE PARTY kicking off SKI SEASON 84/85
promises to be our most legendary one yet . We've planned an
evening of warmth and good cheer that's full of surprises
for our friends • o~d end ~----
• DRAWING for great prizes including sweaters, stretch pants,
powder Jackets, parkas, hats, gloves, goggles,.sunglasses • Pl•• Sida, Boot•, Pole• anfl 8iruf in9e.
•PREVIEW FASHION SHOW of the latei.t m fall and
winter fashions from Nils, Obermeyer, Descente, Roffe, and
lots more.
•SKI VIDEOS
• F.REE BEER AND WINE,
•SAVORY GOURMET FOODS surround our
profeS61onal model, sporting the hott~t in Season 84/85
silk and lace long1ohn .
COME A.NO SHA.RE THE WINTER FESTIVAL.
A.T
N C' tit A.NNUA.t. OPEN HOUSE l'A.RTYI
' ' •
...,,
\
--
1 Buur TIN BoARD
CM sen ors sought
Volunteers re needCd.J.o deliver meals and visit homebound, SCntOfi in Costa Me 11 pan of the
Transponataon, J..;unch nd Counselma program pon·
sored by f:cedba ~Foundation, Inc. of S nta Ana:
The program olTen an alttm tive to institutional care
for the elderly who can no longer shop or prepare meals for
themselves, td Pea Schmitz, home servka'workcr.
To volunteer, call 631·8170 or 83S-80l l.
Ne"J>Ort aaoclatlon meetll
• The Central Newpon Beach Community A$$0Cla·
uon's annual general mcmbershi~ mcelina is 1ehcduled
7:30 p.m .. ~edn~y t the Amencan 4gion Hall on the Balboa Peninsula.
Mayor Evelyn Hart is among the city officials
exprcted to attend the mcetma at the ~on Halt, 215 1 Sth St. •
The association represents 400 dues--payina families.
Men'• IJealtlJ dlscuuloa topic
Dr. ,Sherman Williamson will discus~ ''Men's Health:
Women s Second Best Investment" at lhe monthly On-
the-Go luncheon/lecture series especially for women
Wednesday at the Orange County Medical Association
Conference Center in Orange. · •
The cost is S 12 for the luncheon and lecture or $4 ($2
for seniors) for the lecture only. Call 77I-8040'for a free
brochure or to have your name placed on the mailing list.
Forum 11et on •~ling J.ajarla
"AvoidiogS~ing-related Injuries" will bC the topic of
a free commumty health forum at Fountain Valley
Community Hospital, comer of Euclid and Warner, from
7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday.
OrthoPe<fic specialists Fred Znidei and Wade Eckert
will be speaking. Binder representatives will also be on
hand to assist with proper bindina usage. For more
information, call 966-8168.
•
Summer llqere on Coaat
Square dance leuoas planned
The Royal-T Square Dance Oub and Tustin
Beacbaoen at Newport Pier ~ tbe ltnce~ eummer weatherufotc~oftaborerem..IDdatlaemtlleeearoalaa,....onr.
Community Servtc.es~Depanment will sponsor-a begin----=-~------~ 1 Classes will meet eveninp at Columbus Tustin ncrs'square-<ianceclassslartinaWedncsday. Lunar anct1· ng
School, l 79S2 Beneta Way, Tustin and will be held open
for three weeks. The first night is free and thereafter the
cost will be $2 a person, per evening. For time of the sends· H B teen classes, call Bud or Nancy Taylor at 731-0278.
Dl.covery Club 11eta laacJJeoa
The Discovery Oub, 24922 Muirlands. El Torot will
conduct a fund-nllsina luncheon Wednesday at the i.ake
Forest Branch of Mercury Savings. Tickets are SS per
person and entertainrl)ent by the Musical Comedy Players
will be featured.
The dub is looking for retired or semi-retired people,
writers, war corrcs~ndents, actors, former military and
well-traveled indivtduals, who would like to meet once a
· week to exchange ideas and discuss and debate current
events and issues. For more information, call Penny
11~me at 8S~8803. .
Pottery cJau offered la Irviae
A four-week class on .. Decorative Country-style
Pottery" is being offered by the Irvine Fine Arts C.Coter,
4601 Walnut Ave., Heritage Park. beginnina Wednesday
from 12:30 to 3 p.m. A fee of$3S is required.at the time of
rqistration.
to Washington
Student's patriotic resented "all Americans-no matter their race, creed or social standing .. essay tells meaning There's a pan of eve7 one of us on that flag. That's what wrote." of flight to moon Chris. who won the Los Angeles -----division of the 21 days of America
By ROBERT BARKER. competition by Lucky Stores. won a
otlMOlllJ,......., trip to Washinaton,D.C., and tours of
. places or historic interest for his
· Fifteen-year-old Chris Haack has mother:z June, father, Jeff, and
just returned in triumph to Hunt-himsclJ. The family paid extra to take
inaton Beach from~ tourofWasbina-alona Jeff Jr .• a junior at Huntington
ton. D.C.. after coming in first place Hi&b. . . .•
over about 3,000 competiton in a Chris. who ~ad he ~ wnt!n&
patriotic essay contest. advent~ ~tones. and. illustrating them with his own drawtngs when he Haack,asophomoreatH!-mtangton ·was in the first grade, entered the Novice and advanted potters can learn a step-by-step
approach to building hearth cats, mantle ducks, per-
sonalized plaques, plates, and other ceramic fonns. For
more infonnation, c8Jl SS2-1078.
fftah, Wf!>te about the landing o~ the contest after his mother, a teacher's
moon tn 19~9 by American aide at Park View School, brouibt 'won what?' .. astron~~ts ~etl Armstrona and home the contest forms. "She thou&ht Chris. who attends honors c~
Edwtn Buzz Armstroni. I bad some writina talent,•• he said. at the high school, said he's explOrulJ S~ Company plan• OpelJ IJOUBe "It (the landing) shows what ' "I made up my mind that ifl didn't several career fields, includin& deo-
The Newport Sk.& Company, 2700 w. Coast u: .... way. American ingenuity and hard work hear about the contest by Aus. 13. I tistry. science. chemistry, air spece .......... can do," he said Fnday. would assume that I've lost. technolnovand architecture. Newport Beach. will hold its eighth annual open house Ch · 'd h la · r lh ~.J nutv Wednesday from 1 to IO m r:is sat t e P ntmg o e And then Mom called and said I He also said be may consider a _..~There ~I be ski videos, appre~iew fashion show 00 Amencan fla,a on the moon rep-won. I forgot all about it. and asked, career in the writing field.
the latest in ski wear, aounnet food, free beverages. and a · g::::.'~.~i::e~=.·=~ ... ~~:.I~ I San··On af re fine ie assessetl
Tuesday, Sept. 26
• 9:30 a.m., Oru1e Coaty Board of S.penlson,
Hall of Administration, I 0 Civic Center Plaza. Santa Ana.
• 1:30 p.m., Oru1e Couty Planala1 CommJ111 ...
HaJI of Adm.mistration, 10 Civic Center Pl~ Santa ADI.
• 6:30 p.m., lnlne City Coucll, City Council
Chambers, 17200 Jamboree Blvd.
• 7:30 p.m., Lapaa Beacla Hoa1la1 Committee,
Community Center, 374 Legion St. ·
PoucE Lo e
From ataff ud wire reports
The Nuclear Rqulatory Com-
mission has proposed a S 12S,OOO fine
for the owners of the San Onofre
nuclear generatina station for in·
advertently closing important safety
valves dunoa full-power operation of
the Unit 3 reactor.
The valves, which control two
emergency coolant spray systems
inside the 1, l 00-megawat\ reactor,
remained closed for I 3 days last
March before plant operators cor-
reeled the error, accord&ng to lhe
NRC.
Southern California Edison Co.,
the principal owner and operator of
the seaside power plant, has 30 days
to either pay the fine or request a
bearing before the NRC to appeal the
Judarnent, said NRC spokesman Sue
Gainer.
As a 20 percent owner of the plant,
which is near San Clemente, San
Dieao Gas & Electric Co. is also liable
for 20 ~rcent of the fine. Originallv. it was recommended
that a $2SO,OOO fine be asses~
against the owners of the plant,
Gagner said.
However, Richard De Youfll. di-
rector of the NRC Office of In pee·
tion and Enfoiument. redu~ the
proposed fine to $12S.OOO.
De Youna lo\ticred the fine because
of Edison's "prompt and effective
corrective action, including in-
itiatives to improve management and su~rvisory effectiveness,'' Gqncr
said.
Os11u~R1E s
Ser.vices today
for Mary Jo Voit
Memorial 9CtViocs were sdleduled lbis aftemooD for
Mary Jo Voit. Balboa Island rnidcnt and widow of Voit
Rubber Corp. founder WillaRl D. VoiL
Mn. Voit died Saturday&\ Hoag Memorial Hospital
Shcwas72.
The Voits were Jong-times~ of HQll. wbert
Mr. Voit served on the board of directors and 11 presidc:Dt
of the private Hoag Foundation. Mn. Voit conti.Dued a a
benefactor of the hospital after ha buSband's death ol
cancer in 1980.
The Willard D. Voit Memorial R.adi9lo1:Y 0qias1. ..
ment was named for Mr. Voit on tiis dcatru
Mrs. Voit, bom in Ohio on May 13. 1912. was a
member of the Alpha Ocha Phi 10rority and the N~
Harbor Yacht Oub. She and her husband moved' to
Balboa Island in 19S7.
Mr. Voit founded t.bc Voit Rubber Corp .. 9t'hich
mcraed in 19S7 with tbe AMF Sponina Goocb Co.
Mrs. Voit is sunivcd by her tODS.. Willard S.: 'Qd
Richard A •• of.Ne"~J>e:>n Beach, and Robert D .• ofEncirio; her motbet, BCnie Stimson, of Newpon; and two
grandchildren, Richard and Robcn.
The family requested that coo.tributiona ~ made in
Mrs. Voit's name to the Willard D. Voit Radioloey
~ent of Hoaa Ho~tal.
The memorial service was to be held today 4 p.ID..'at
Pacific View Memorial Part in Newport Bcacb. A private
burial was planned at Pacific View.
£aauna pliotographer
RoDert Randall dead
Internationally known fashion photopapher and 20.
year ~oa Beach resident Rbbert Randall died Sept 19
or complications followina heart bypass surgery at
Univmity HO$J>ilal in La Jolla.
Randall, 6S, most rcttntly t.au&ht fashion phOlOlrl·
phy at UC lrVioc and Oranae Coast Collese.
Sina' rmnna to ~na &acb lD J 964, Randall
devoted himself to teachinJ; He recently bad written a
book, "Fashion Photograph). A Guide for the Bqi.nncr,"
which was 1~blishcd this year b)' Prentice-Hall.
Randallis survived b)' a brother, Patrick. ofteuQdia~
a cousin, Patricia Stuart, ofC&rmel: and a nephew, Patrick
Randall Jr., of Mexico Cit).
No services arc planned.
Doughnµt shop bandits
sought by Valley: eolice
5tereo and speakers. valued at $600.
were stolen.
Sibido Avenue. About $60 damqc 16000 block of Coral Cay.
.-.-as done, but the property lOS& was Thie'es stol; :~ut 2S yards of
Police are aeatthln& for two men
• who robbed a fountain Valley1 douabnut shop at pnpoint Monday
morning.
The holdup occurred at 11 a.m. at
the Winchell'• 1hop1• 18856 Brook.burst St Fountain valley de-
tective Rick Christensen said one
man entered the shop ~ an
oranae JWce and returned just a
minute laterW1th a companion.
lbe ftnt man di1played a blue ncel
bandaun and ordered a clerk into a
mtroom. Christensen said. The sun-
man then ordered the manqerto fill a
Winchell's till with an undetennincd
amount of cash from the safe, the
Coeta .... S~t. Police belteve Delarosa-Lopez
A Costa Mea man who is sui.na the obtained his drup from from an PKific: Amphithc.tre over noiac apartment at 782 Shalimar Drive,
&om rock concerts reportedly re-where two other men were &rre$tcd
oeivcd a threatenina telephone call lut week durina a raid that netted
Monday from an unidentified man narcoucs aacau 30 b&lloona of b r· who apparently was anary with the oin, with an estimated ruttt value of
suit. The ,caller threatened lO bum $300, authonties said.
down the house of Frederick Bruno, • • ••
one of acvcn homcownm that filed a A 24-year-old Costa Mes1 man was
joint lawsuit last -wttk apinst the left in the cold Monday niaht after ampbith~ttr. Bruno's name has bClna pick:poeketcd by a quick·hand·
1ppeartd m veral n~w paper ac-cd woman whopve him a ride home
counts aoout th~ ~I d1sP9te. from a bar. Police •d lbe woman,
A tP.year-old Cotta Mesa man known only 1 .. Judy .. arabbed Juan
1u1pceted ,of peddbn& hettnn was. Martinez's. wallet ~~rn the hick
arrested Monday by undmovcr pocket ofh11 pants as tie •ufoed to tet
narootict wnts, Who are conocntrat· out of !he car. he then pu hut h•m 1na on a small-time dN&rin&alleacd· out of the eh1c:lc and 11pttd otT -
l_y ~tin& ;from an apenmeot on ... uh the wallet ahd UOO. Man1nu
Shahmar .Drive. Ennque Ddatosi· had a~ntly meet the S.fi t-~.
Lopez. who I uspe_ckd of Klhna I IQ.pound blonde at the bu and
SIOO wonh of heroin 10 a pc>lace talkina W1lh her n the car petkcd m
informant o er •h lat three wee f'ro1nofhis1pertmentcomplc at 12S wa mcked up an front ora r on 19th y around I 0 pm.
rqister and a cash drawer, be said.
The manqer was ordered into a
restroom, and the two robbers fled .
They were described as Hispanic
men, in their mid·20s. both heavy set.
One was about 6-3 and had slickcd-
baclc blade hair. The other was about
S-7 with tattoos on both anns. .
not immediatelt ":~wn. carpetina from a th in& room, d.i.nlDI
Soutb Coanty Forcina open a kitchen window, room and hallway at a residence ill
A "'allct cont.ainina a service st.a-burglars ransacked a home Monday the 10000 block of Pua. t1on credit card and about $30 in cas.h th 10800 bl t. f La Ba · • • • · fi n1 1.._,.1 • on e oc .. 0 Usta 9 .. -1 ... ..., stole a ,-1·d..,.,_ ...... t-t• ..._ was taken rom an u oc .. n.i car in A Th 1 · J d_,,. • -..-.~ "~ " ... -Laguna Niguel Saturday maht. The venue. ~ ue oss mc u ~a women s corder valued at $400 and a color TV
-car wa parked in the-parking lot of-o_pai_n_· n.._a_w_o_nh _ _!3!>0.-_ _______ nlucd atS~ from a residence in the
the vicum's condominium complex A S«Ond home on the 10800 block 16000 block of Alf>ncuun. • ---.--
on East Niae Ori\'e. of La Batista Avenue 9.'aS als0 • • • • • • burglarized Monday. Entr) wa made Thie>< es tole loadina stcpS valued
A biC)cle 'alucd atabout $100was throuah an unlocked rear door, and at $350 from a dock at Peter's
reported stolen late Saturday or ttrl)' then the intruder kicked in the door to • Landina.-• • •
Sunday from the back)ard of a home the master bedroom. The loss in-Someone tole a meat shoct ind
on Birchwood in Laguna Hill · The eluded S200 in cash. do6f. mixer from Barro•s Pizza, bur&lar is believed to have entered • • • 75 c:-..1: .a. • through the backyard pte. Over the weekend. someone tole &:.UJQltr n~e• •
• • • the batteries from two bite vans at ·A. Lquna Hill woman id she the El,,.11\ Institute. l 832S Mt. Baldy Buralan bro e a window to a
the '·ictim of indttent upoW.rc Circle. ~ l v.b esumated at bathroom ia w 900 block of: Palm
Sunday momina hilt jogiaa alona s 1 H. and stole a ~.net conta.inana $600 in
Oso Pa~'I)_. " t of Cabot Road. cash.
She dcscriora the uspec1 as a male HGDtl~n Beach Thieve -open~· a• metal overhead
Meiucan in his early 20s who. she-Someone ~tole about S300 in hoe roU type door and tole numerous said, -.·as stand.in& naked in the · A-,,;.A l s2 000 ..___ bu.sh along the >dC•'ll ·~hen he polish and $100 1n cash a11.Q pr)ll\& pans, val~ at QSt ~. , uvm tan b). open the front door: to a shoe l'Cp&ll CJ~. 16751 Beach Bl d;
busillCS$ at 100~9 f'~s Ave. lnlrudm ran• ; ~a home m \he
Bw&tars le u l t·foot boat 21000 bJOCk of H1laria and o -a
valued at $1 00 from a dock in the $700 .. id tte recorder.
Power out in Newport Beach
I•
A• Or.not Cout DAILV PILOT/Tuesday, Stptwnb« 25, 1984
-
President tells
n~~~l'P--tu~a~
NATION
--
Agent Oran e settlement
eco-renaissance By I
NEW YORK -A fede 1 jud todti> lcntAu~ely pprovcd a propo
The l)teS1dcnt. respondina to pcr-WA HI Gl 0 (APJ -Pint•
dent Reagan 1d today lhe economic
policies followed by his adrmn1s-
• tration h e ''given birth to n
' Ameri n rerunssancc .. lhat i) touch-iDf. the economies of other nations
'Born in the safe harbor of free-
dom, eoonom1c growth gllthcred
fotce1 and rolled out in a rising tide
.tlaat nas reached di tant horcs," he
said an the~parcd te"t ofa Jpcech to
the annual mectina of the Jnter·
national Monetary Fund and the
1stent oomplarnts of the forcian
officials about hi&h U. . intcrcat
rates. ptedlcted those rates would fall
further. . te also told the group that the
strong srowth tO imports by the
United States has more than offset the
costs at used by surge in interest rat
here.
SI O million settlement 1n .i;uit by ictnam vetcmns who 1d they and th ir
families were horm('ld by th~" rt1n1e herbicide e11t O~e. '.11 he d~mon by
U.S. Dis1nct Judge Jack B. Weinstein of Brooklyn would, 1fhe aweslus final
OK, effectively end the -yenr~ld Jcpl battle between lhc velerans and th seven comPAnics th t manufactuttd A ent Orange. Veterans and the
companies re still suao the U.S. sovernmcnt. Wctnstetn must &till establish a
mechanism to d~termmc which vctrran and relativ;. qualify to. reoclve
mone)' from the settlement fund, and ho\\ much. He said he m1P.t ttll re,Ject
the stttlemcnt af a tisfi ctory plan for disttatluting the money is not developed.
I '
Wortd Baok.
ICE SKATING
~NS
"Not enough mention is made of
trade and the far greater benefit
devclopin.g countries receive from
renewed economic growth and open
market policies of the Un1tedztates ••
he said. •
He told the grouf, also rried
·about the trend o industrializrd
nations to ttrect u.dc t>amen, that
the United Stat~ h d k'.ept ns markCJs
open to products from all over the
world and he caUed fora new round of
trade talks.
.. We're not just fighting protCC•
tionism, we w'8nt to 10 forward
toward more open markets," he wd.
noting that at London economic
summit of industrialized nations in
June he had pressed for an expanded
round of trade liberalization.
Since the foreign officials bcpn
arrivin.g here I.lite last week. they have
expressed their satisfaction with the
upturn in the world's economy, led by
the unexpectedly strong rebound in
the United States.
,., ......
Day at the circus
Kate 8tneu, left, and Katie llcAl ... ter, both 4, enjoy a llttle
clo'WlliD& arou4 after beln.I( made up by the •faff at the lllqlln& Broe. Barnum and Ball9 Circa ln L09 An&elee.
Writer donates $2M to coJJege
PHU.ADELPHIA-Pulitzer Pme-winningauthor
James Michener ~ a $2 milhon donatton 10
Swarthmore CollCJe is rep yment for a $2,000 scholar·
ship he i'ttetved an 1925. "with $1.998,000 anlCl'e$1."
Michener, a Do)'Jestown natl\'e who has written 29 books
that have been lran I ted into 25 languages, araduated
from Swanhmore 1n 1929. The 77·ycar-old author said -
Monday hts education at the highly ranked liberal ans
ooltqc .. was crucial in my life. ... It unlocked
opp.Jnuniues in hfe in a v.ay that notb1na el5C could
have." In a statement to the-presf about the donation,
Michener said the interest wa "I .~to-1,ju~t about the
financial value of a Joo<l libenil art education. Of course, MICHENER
the spiritual value ts a lot higher." The education °enlarged my perimettra b)'.
about a factor ot 50," Michener told the Philadelphia Inquirer from his home
in Austin, Texas. "I came in one penon and came out another. "And l let\
Swarthmore with the unde~tandinas and the tools that have served me for the
rest of my life."' ·
TeaclJen atrf.te la five •tlites I
·Reagan arms 8.ddress called
'an empty vessel' by Soviets
New teacher strikes in Pennsylvania and New Jersey outpaced contract
settlements in other districts nationwide as more than 2,800 educators
remained on strike at schools serving 54,000 students. Teachers walked out
Monday in two Pennsylvania school districts and at a New Jersey community
college, but nearly 2,000 instructon went back to work without a contract in
Rockford. JJI.. the state's second-lariest district. O_ther strikes continued in
Michigan, Lou1siana, Illinois, Pennsylvania and New Jersey.
Floods leave m0114altoes ID Tua•
'BROWNSVILLE. Texas -Health officials are awna for the public's
help as they battle mosquitoes breeding in thousands of acres of standina water
left after parts of south Texas were drenched with almost 20 inch~ of rain last
week. As more than 500 Rio Grande Valley families arc repairing damage to
homes, sanitation crews were workina almost around the clock to stave ofT a
massive mosquito invasion, Cameron County Health Ocpanment spokesman
Ray ROdriguez said Monday. Aooding in some parts of the county was the
worst since Hurricane Beulah blew through in 1967 .. he said.
'Speech contained no indication of change
in the essence of the present U .s: policy .... '
iet invitations for· a moratorium on
space weaPons• development.
The Enahsh-laOJuage radio report
said Reapn .. claimed that the in-
• Enhance your ch1kr1 poise and posture A
~anned p1ogram of lessons with the intern•·
11onalty famous Ice Capades' easy learning
metnod gives you or your child whOlesome
heallhy exerc11e tn comfortable, supervised
surroundings
New Skaters Welcome!
r.----------·-----~ : SS.OOOFF : • • • lce ... d:fi&..-• • : ........... : . ,. __ , ____ .
I A·1 r-.. I ~--·----~--------~ REGISTER NOW
•
Mesa Verde Center
2701 Hatt>or Blvd.
Costa Mesa, Ca 92626
(714) 979-8880
MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet
Union today rejected proposals made
by President Rcapn an an address to
the United Nations, sayina h.is in-
itiatives "boiled down to absolutely
groundless assenions"' that the Unit-
ed States seeks an end to the arms
race.
The official news agency Tass said
Reagan's statements that he sccb an
improvement in U.S.-Soviet rela-
tions were an attempt .. to present in a
somewhat modified fonn the self-
same policy aimed at further aa-
gra vaung international \ension,
achieving military superiority and
interfering in the internal affairs of
other states ...
The president offered "a vessel
with nothing inside it,•• Tass said.
"His speech contained no indica-
uon of any change 1n the essence of
the present U.S. policy and bolled
down to absolutely groundless asser-
tions that the U.S.A. allegedly wants
the arms race to be curbed and
su1>1>0rts the ba5ic aims and prin-
1/1238 4a + ntx per mo..
•
Ml• .... ~ tO"lR!ed wfth T-bal; Alr~dttlonlng, •
stereo cassette, power Windows, and many other featuru
60 mo closed end le.se, cap cost $15.l,2, down pay-
ment $137212 ash or trade (Ser 023661)
....., __ AJ ... 1 .... ca .... r-• .ub}ect to prlor~la~,..:.Z;aw;:::::mm;:d
N I B • A N .
188 Dowe ... PMwpon a.ch • 7M·133-1300
LOOKING FOR
''THE''
APARTMENT?
SEE SUNDAYS
REAL ESTATE
SECTIOl'.\I
llailJ Piii
-----~---
ciples of the U .N. charter:· the news creased military miJ!lt of the United
aaency said. States (would pro.v1de) !he ~1s for
"The president's words concerning . talks with the Sov~el Union. CALIFORNIA
-- - -peace .were ~nly mc:ant to ~moufl~ge The broadcast said Reagan called W~sru.naton s ~c foreign J?Oh~ for negotiations to top the military De Lorean co-defendant gets 10 years gu1~eh.nes an4 1ts 10terventton1st use of outer space, but added: '"he •1111!!1•
policyyn all recio!1' of the world-:-in agam rejected the Soviet proposal to LOS ANGELES -Wilham Morgan Hetrick, the
!-he M1ddle East, in.c.en.traJ Amen~, ban the testing and deployment of admitteddrugsmugg)crwhowasJobnZ. De Lorean'sco-
an the south .?f Afnta;. m Europe. m anti~tellite weapons when talks (on defend.ant. won a relatively li~t sentence of 10 years in
the Far East, Tass ~~ud-. . space arsenals) open." . ~ . . prison after a prosecutor praised his .. genius" and bis
The aaency sa1d "The U.N. The Soviets have proposed talks transformation into a cooperating witness. The sentenc-
rost.J'?-.lm ~~actually. used ~Y R~ga~ aimed at banning military use of ing Monday was a ~ tscnpt to the drug-traflkkina trial fo~.h1s Poh~cal. elecuo~ccnn.g ~urns. space, but the Re~n administration of De Lorean, which ended Aug. 16 with the-1ormer Wha~ kind of p~ident wtll Re-bas insisted the discussions be open automalcer's acquittal by a jury that suggested he had
agan be 1f re-c~ected ! Tass asked. to all issues including Earth-based been entrapped. Hetrick could be free in less than two
The Ta~ dispatch quoted. several nuclear weapons. The Soviet also years. since most defendants serYe only one third ofsuch
U.S .• media reports descnb.1na Re-want 15 a precondition to talks a sentences, and Hetrick has already been in prison since
agan .s change of tone as de~1gned to moratorium on the testing and October 1982. Hetrick's attorney said in pre-sentencing
alleviate Amencan. voters uncas1-deployment of space weapons. U.S. docu·ments that Hetrick. a one-time aviation whiz, is HETRICK
ness atx;>ut U .S.-Sov1et relauoos. officials said such moratorium would remorseful. has talked of committing suicide and was led astray by the man
In his address to the General be to Sovie1, not U.S. advantase. who was De Lorean's chief accuser, James Timothy Hoffman. The lawyer,
Assembly on Monday, Reapn called Radio Moscow also said "it fol-Stephen Wilson. said Hetric~ who had retired from the drua business, was
for talks ~tw~n the supcrpow~rs lows" from Reapn 's speech that "the enuced into a cocaine deal by the Jlamour. of rubbing shoulden with De
and .an casing m tense U.S.-SoY!et U.S.A. intends to continue tts present Lorean. rela~ons. ~~ Reagan ~poke, Soviet policy in Central America, the Fo~ignM!msterAndrC1A.Gromyko Middle East and southern Africa, R..-adan backer •wltches to Ferraro
sat 1mpass1vely. which boils down to supporting --e· . · .. · ..
Gromyko . and R~n are sc~ed-terrorist and racist regimes in• the FRESNO-Chargmg that the Republican Party ~as turned l~ back on ~led tom~ m Wash}ngton on Fn~y areas and opposin& national libera-women, a female member of the state central committee has resigned ~nd
m the Amencan president's first high-ti on movements... announced her endorsement of Democrats Walter Mondale and Geraldine
level talks with a Soviet official. . • · . Fertaro. "After 20 years, 1 can no longer serve as a leader in a party that has
In an initial Soviet reponse todar, The report by Pobs~ TVs New tumeditsbackonitshistory, traditionanditswomen,"MaryStanley,aFresno
Radio Moscow criticized Reagans York correspondent said the speech businesswoman.announcedMonday.Stanleysaidshewillremainaregistered
speech. sayini he insisted on U.S. "did. not ch.angc any element of the Republican and will help organize a national Republicans for Mondale-
military suoenoritv and rejected Sov-ant 1-S o v 1 et st rate g Y ·" Ferraro group. ••1 wish he (Mondale) had the fire, spunk and charisma of
THE
RELAXING
SOUNDS
OF THE
HARBOR
KDCM iaa.i
FM
STEREO
SOUTH COAST FITNESS
& PHYSICAL THERAPY
lmmedl•t• R"ult•
!ftRCIH
THE EA8YWAY PHY81CAL
THl"APY
"' plnal M,lusttnentl ., m.cer1 II' a tr ...........
.,.. WA lwttM .... .... ~ExltdM&
T 1rt to a Ootden 8town ....................
Wld mu.cle ~ pumping
lfOn
.... .....,........ ... ..,... c..t
....... Lo--.°""'.~
"'M--0-
"' pfMI T r9Cllon
., JftrMound, tent
v KydroCIWaPV
.... In
Spottt lnfUtlel
MOST INSURANCES ACCEPTED
MO t , !U'IJTOl. IT! 100
-... Mt.mt " """"" COHt IMnk lt\lllCSlng
545-3478
(
..
Geraldine Ferraro, .. Stanley said. "But in reviewina bis record; he has been
supportive of women's issues and is very experienced. I think he would be a
tremendous improvement over the current president."
State u:perta to help Florida cltras larmen
LOS ANGELES -The California Department of ~culture has
dispatched five plant patholopsts to Aorida to help authoriues detect and
eradicate the citrus canker that could cripple or kill the state's citrus crop. "The
arc desperately tryina to track down bow it got to the first nursery, and so far
they have not ferreted out the source;• said Alex Frcnchy senior plant
pathologist. The experts were dispatched Monday. Aorida officials banned all
citrus harvestina Monday until each orange and grapefruit grove is re-checked
and certified free of deadly citrus canker. The movement-of fresh citrus fruit
within the state was also banned.
Watwood rampage ricdm• testl.fy
LOS ANGELES -Victims of a WestwOod traffic incident in which a
motorist mowed down SS pcc:>ple on a crowded sidewalk, killing one and
leaving several critically inJurcd. have recalled their eitperiences at a court
hearing. Francine Carroll, 29, who reached the witness stand only with the help
of a walker due to her injuries, remembered walking on Westwood Boulevard
near the University of California, Los An1eles, and seeing one headlight come
toward her ... In an in tant it went from bright tight to total darkn .. sa.id
Carroll, who suffered a broken collar bone, three cracked ribs, a crushed
vertebra, shoulder injunes, a brui~ heart and kidneys and a dislocated foot
and cuts. She testified Monday b'cfore'West Los Angeles Mumcipal Judge
Sherman W. Smith Jr, in the preliminary hearins for Daniel Lee Youna. 21 , of
lngtewood,who is dlarged with one count of111u1der and 51' count of
attempted murder.
WORLD
--------
CJJemen.to ad~ MoacowgatJJerbJ6
MOSCOW -Soviet Pre idcnt 1<onst.antin U. Chfmenlfo, makina his
first public appearance before a large ptherioa ince June, told a Kremlin
m~llnl today t!ta~ peop_lcpannot hide from the nuclear threat nor "turn it into
a JOke. He said the United States docs not understand that there is "no
sensible alternative to the normali1ation of Soviet-American relations on the
principle of equalitr,. mutual respect and non-interference in the internal
affairs of each other. ' Chernenko, who turned 73 Monday, wa greeted with
"stormy applause" when he addressed the soviet writet1' union m(Ctina in the
Kremlin, the official nc~ agency Ta said.
gDeen IMY• Canada a v<
MONCTON, New Brunswa k -Queen Eliubeth II was v.'lnnly
welcomed by dbcendant of French colonists pcrtttuted by Bntain u she
arrived to join in New Brunswick's celebration of200 years of 1 ttlcment. 'rhc
queen began her tWO"wcck Canadian tour Monday1 v1 u1na a predominantly
Frenoh-speaklna filtuna town of hed1a and un\c1lint a plaque to mart the
IOOth anniversary of the Roman Catholic: pansh olSt. Jo ph. Tddty in
Fredericton, she wa 10 prucnt new coat of 'arms to cap 1 year-IOna
cclCbrataon of New Brun wick's 200 years a province. Her schedule also
1ncludc:d a scmcc at Chnst Church Cllhedral and a bicentennial picnic on the
Shady lawn ofWtlmot Part . . . .
-
'
Lantern dedicated
County
commends
ER services
" hrce rca ho p1tal ~e com-
mended by th rounty•s f.mcrgcncy
Medical "ices ency recently for
hav1n1 cll.emplary emergcnc) depart·
ments
S ddlcb ck Community Ho p1tal
tn Laiuna Hall , Hoa Memonal
Ho phal tn Newport Beach and
Tu un Community Ho pita! ch
received the high t rating pgJSiblc
dunng rouune inspccuons ofboSl)ital
emergency centers th t worlt m
cooperauon with paramedic person-
nel m OnmF County.
The three ho p1tals were the only
ones out of 38 recently in pccted in
Orange County that received a two-
year ccrt1ficauon and letter of com·
mendatioft from the agenC).
t DA LY PILOT/irundey ~ ,_.
DON'T Ml
A Kur •toDe laDtena ,l'Ol/D
OkaM , Japan, wu dedi-
cated lut week at ln1De
terrace Park hi Newport
Beach. no.., 11ce--. left, of
the Newport Balboa ~
Clab, wu Joined at tbe cer-
eJDODJ bJ Dr. Teaaeo Okada, eeater. aad artlat Sanmo
Jamka, rtOt. Tlae lantern
le a lift to Bae city from tM •
O'a•kl 8oatb RotarJ. cel-
ebra tlnl it• 20tb aa•
· alftnary tilts year. Coast residents at
Special Olympics
'
....
;
COME SEE
Se\·cral Coast rcsidcnt5 "Acre in-
cluded in a &roup of near!) 400 Special Olympians who learned to
catch a ball, swim a lap or perfect a
·hook shot this summer. The Special
Olympians learned sic.ills at a camp
designed just for them, the Carl's Jr.
-California S~ial Olympics
Sports Training Camp.
The five, one-week sports training
camps, held at UC Berkeley in
Northern California and at UC San
Diego, involved Special Olympians
in daily sports training SC$$ions,
sports-related act1V1ties. aquatics and
recreational and evenma activities.
The local students included were:
Huntinaton Beach -Dennis Louie
----5coU. and Lynn Andenon. Fountal.n
Valley-Debbie Herzog.
Boating editor Almon Lock-
abey launches a weekly boating
section In Thursday's Dally Pilot.
THE NEW ELEGANCE
OF CIAOSPCDRT AT OUR FALL . . .
FASHION AND HOLIDAY PREVIEWS . ..
...
THE QUICKE T WAY~ JUST' PEP.
___ , ___ _
Disc<YtJeT coordiMte> designed with a EuropNn 11pprKi:ttion of tailoring, an Amnu"itn ~se of st'jk. £:uk for 'IM woman
tz;ho knows herf.shion idmtuy: sophinic11ted, imporunt, 11.SSured. Here, tlN shorter o~·b.;tton jadttt. SlH. SiJe.'pleakd skirt.
SlOO. Boch, winter u;hitt or blut purt wool gabrrrdint. And tht striped stoclt t~ b/o~. Blw/whittlrrugtntA polyesic. S82.
All, +16. Comt set tlN tntirt colltcuon 11ndfind your ntw image/or fall m Robinson's Htn~ S~ar, 9.
SHOWTIME:
join us as we wt/cQ~ Sturt Roch, Prtsidmt of Cwosport, uu1 t.'ltUI tht 1 4 filShum coJ.l«tum .i.·
NE\f'PORT, Twulay, &ptnnbn-15, 12-J p.m.
Si u.m Roih
•
Ats 0 ~ OoMt OAILY p LOT/T~sd•y, tPttmber 25, ea• 1
L ~~' over Jacksom tour offers
renls nd other fin nc1al con at other U. . conc:cn al
Pa den rec tional director
J cobs.
But the Rose Bowl ln Pa dena will
offer no u h concessions. Nor will
lhc Coh um in Los Angel • where
Ocncral ~ n Jam Hardy satd th
J ckson "wanted to gwc us SH,000
a da) to rent the Coliseum. which IS
ridiculous."
" ... Our Po 1uon 1s that unlcs they
pay the aorna rate and meet the
requirements of our lease. we're not
inttruted," Hardy said. "No. I, we
don't need them. We ju t had a bi& ~Y from tbe Olympics. No. 2.
we ve got the Raiden. and the) .. re
U.S. 'spacecommand'
puts military in ozone
Conflict between space craft seen r h~~:T~\~~i~b!~!h:r~~05~.~ a-S-ill_C_V_lt-a-:b'"""'l,,,_C_W_l_t.,:-h-1.;;;.,n-n--.-e-X-t-2~5,_y_C_a_r_S-----~ satellites UsN for reconnaissan~ Or
spr,ing purposes."
LONDON (AP) -The United commands by the U.S. Air Force and 'There as a crowing tcndeney on
tes is dcyelopina a new breed o( Navy. reflected ~owing concern both sides to try out interferrina with
m astronauts because generals about increased militaf}' ac\ivity in each other's satellites just to see what
fe that superpower skinnishma in space. "The l>clief atnona U.S. de-happens," be told The A~sociated.
al · · bl " · h fi h. fi b · th 25 Press. "In a way that 1s more 5 cc is " most 1nev1ta e tn t e ense c 1c 1 t al 1n e next years convenient for those of us down here ext 25 years, says the new Jane's contests in space are not only possible on Earth."
Spacefliaht Dirc~tory publi hed but almost inevitable, have led to the
today. settina up of the new USAF Space He wrote in the directory lbat thde
Although the United States is Command," he said. National Aeronautics and Space A •
ahead m space technology. "the In a radio interview tOday, he said ministration's "tradiuon of an open
Russians have been far more that means fierce superpower com-space program is being steadily
ergetic and successful in applv1rur. petition and technolnaicaJ skir· eroded by the addition of secret en J'. 1r h. th -r. control rooms at the Kennedy and the technolO&Y that t~ey ~~ss; mis mg. ra er: than outnght space
editor ReiinaJd Turrull said IJ! an battles, as the United States and the Johnson space ccnters1 and by press-
introduct1on to the 311-page direc-Soviet Union jockey for the "high ure for a separate military fleet of
lory. around" above the Earth. space shuttles."
The directory 1s produced by the uTbc fcelin& is that contests, rather The Iona-term aim is to form the
Jane's Publishing <:o., which issues thari war, are li.lc.ely. And this son of "new breed of military astronauts"
military yearbooks that arc con-thina bas already begun, of course, among NASA's 77 Sl>&CC traavelers sidcrcd highly authoritative by the with the superpowers pushing and into ••a separate team who will nurse
defense establishment. shovina one another up there in their secrets," flying shuttle craft "to
Turnill said the fonnation of space space," Tum ill said. "There's some and fron\ the inevitable manned military reconnaissance platforms,"
llli•lllii•iiiiilll _____ ll!lll!l-----------• 1urnill said.
101D& 1.0 bC good,pa)da)· too:•
AtAnahetm tadium1 two Nov
ber date have been held open oc
uperstar inacr Michael Jackson and
his brothr • but Sullivan hasn'c
contacted tad1um officials for i
month and there has been no dis·
cu sion at all boutrenl. said 1tad1u111 opcrauons mana&er Bill Tum r
l:, but J obs said lhe I 05,00Q.
t s d1Um ha plcnt> of bookings
nd as not prepared to offer Sullivan
reduced rent.
1 h Rqse Bowl chars s 10 pen.>cnt
of the gro as dots the Coti um, s
well as up to a maximum of60cent a
ucket. The Coliseum h ts for
around 90 000 people.
But he said the Sovieu appear to be
winnina the second space race -to
build a manned station above the KanMa State Penitentiary officer aea.rcha railroad tracb for eecaped con'ricta.
. .
Another embassy
worker succumbs
BEIRUT, LebanOn (AP) -
Another U.S. Embaley employee
died today of wounds tuffered In
M em~ ~ bombing. a L.ebenele mllttary I~
V..ttkliator r .. 1•1Cf a partial •
ICttptiOn of the IUldde bOmber.
U.S. Embuly epol(.-oman
Cerot ~lion· Miid a eeventh
Ltlbanele em~ Of the em-
~ died t~. Alec> kHled,
KCOrdtng to the State QIJ>art·
tnent, were two~Mdat
teut ftw other~.
Earth. "The battle for space-based
laser weapons is settling down to be
grimmer and much more expensive
than the race to the moon 20 years
ago," be said. •
Citina U.S. intelligence sources, be
said tho Soviets could be able to place
lllab-cnersY laser weapons in orbit by
1916. The United States does not
Manhunt for escaped cons
expect to do that until 1989. continues in Kansas area
The kwe9tlga1or, Bia Mouu,
Mid the bOmber was about 20
WU weerin,g 8 Whit• lhort ..
'11M41.v4ta aNt1 wtWl he cralhed his
~ftu.d van next to the
U;8. Emt>May annex. MOUA Mid
the delcrtption waa baed on the
testtmony of five Lebaneee wit-
neuee he hu lnt«roga!ed about
fhe attack Thurlt!ay that killed at
lea•t 14'~1•. ·
Mouu Mid bomb experts were examining the van'• ,.. ma&na, which were mOY9d Mon-
day from the born~ IOefl8 In
the .uburb of Auker to the a.lrut
mHttary court hMdquart ...
There wu no word on the
progr ... of a MPll'ate lnQUlry by
a U.S. team that arrtved-Frlday
with Aalttant Secretary of Stat•
Richard Murphy.
"As a mull, the United States LANCASTER, Kan. (AP) -Of.
cannot hope to catch up with the ficers with search dogs combed barns
Soviet Union in space station oper· and homes tn a-2-squ4re-mile area
ations, from crew rotation to ma-today after three of five inmates who
terials proccssina. until well into the escaped from a top-security prison
1990s." were spotted gcmng out oft car 8Jld
More than 70 peroent. of Soviet runnina mto a field.
space launches have been "military in . Authorities believe the five -
P.urpose," and another IS percent three of them convicted murderers,
'partly military," Tumill stressed. four serving life sentences -split up
By comparison, he said 37 of 92 shortly afterthcy sawed their way out
U.S. shuttle missions planned by of the Kansas State Penitentiary on
September 1988 will include Defense Monday. Silhtings of the inmates
Department payloads with 18 "dedi· were re~rted within 10 miles of the
cated entirely to military purposes." prison, m Leavenworth, Basehor and ...:._ _______ _;_ __________ ;._;:; _________________ __, Tonganoxie.
The escape appeared to be well
planned. The inmates used hacksaws
lo cut through a mesh gate, crawled
through ductwork and then cut
through a bar covering a window
opcnina. Prison officiaJs dispatched a team
of officers to this northeastern Kansas
town at 10:30 p.m. Monday after
authorities spotted three men
matching descriptions of the ~scapc
cs, Atchtson County Sheriff Hulh
Gillen said.
Lancaster City Marshal Larry
Meyers reported seeing two black
men and a white man leave a car
northwest of Lancaster, about 30
miles from the _prison in Lansins.
Meyers notified county authorities
in Lancaster, then returned to the area
with Atchison Coun~ deputies,
where they spotted the trio along the
road, Gillen said.
SeeinJ the patrol car, the men ran
down the road and into a field, Gillen
said. "They observed our car and they
just disappeared," said Gillen, who
was morutorin1 the officers' radip
dispatches.
Prison Deputy Director Randall
Buford said 10 men and two supcr-
vison were sent to the area and Gillen
said a team of dogs from the prison
and Kansas Highway Patrol troopers
were on the aoene earl toda .
Prison officials also reported a
si1htin1 near Lebo, Kan., an Coffey
County, about 100 miles from Lans-
mJ-Buford said no one from the
pnson was checking out that report,
but that local authorities were in-
vcstipting.
Pnson Director Herb Maschncr
told reporters at a news conference
Monday that the inmates apparently
took advantage of a prison rcno-
vauon project that followed a break-
out in 1981.
Maschner said the five inmates
apparently used pieces of hacksaw
blades to cut through a mesh ptc on
the third floorofCellhouse D.
The five then apparently slid down
three floors in a space about one foot
wide between a mesh fence and
plvanized steel air duct, entered a
blower and crawled ten to 12 feet
through the 3-foot-wide duct to an
opcnina to the outside. From there
the escapees sawed throu&h a bar
about 11/• inches thick, Maschner
said.
Buford said the inmates were
discovered missing shortly after the
escape when a guard in a pnson tower
reported seeing two inmates running
in the shadows .
,GRAHAM SEES
ARMS 'THAW'
NEW YORK (AP) -The Rev. BfflY Graham, Ju8t returMd from
a tour of the Soviet UnlOn, Mid
today he think• there are algns
that relations are beginning to
Improve betwtitn that najlon and
the United Statel.
••T'tiere'• • PMCI offenllVe on
from the AnWICan point of vtew
and from the Soviet pOtnt of
vleW, ''he Mid, ott1ng the freedom
heen~~hle12-daytrip Md the ~ mMtlri.Q of
Pt11lillnt RMGM and 80Ytet ~ Mlnlater Andrei
t ltMk thWte QOlng to
gtw ~ much In ..... Ulka •..
&Ut ... ~ lnipect around the WOrtd II gotng to be ,......_.. GNheni Mid on
.
~BO'• .. Good MornJnQ Amert-
ca.''
"I think rt'• onlY the beginning.
For the next two or thr• ~
we're going to"' a tremendout
lot of dialogue betwMn the two
countrlea,'' he sakt.
The evangetlat aald he uw In
the Soviet Unk>n "I alight cMiGe
taking ~-In their attitude toward religion" and that the
s~ government~ betfylng "to lhow that th«•'• more
reUglOua lntereat In ttielr oountry
thin la peroetvec:t •round the
WOrld.''
the Communl1t Party
propagandizes for atMlam "bUt l
don't think they're Winning the
.,.ttle," he aaid.
Lunch & Dinner, Sun ay -Thur.s ay __
Saturday,
~-----....._____.Se pte mbe r 29"---
rder one of these delicious entrees, and we'll serve it with our
famous traditional flavor margarita. So come, treat yourself ~o a
Margarita Dinner and enjoy 12 ounces of Mexico's favorite beverage.
A) Chicken Picado $6.75
Breast of chicken saut~ed with onions. bell peppers and toma~s
(well spiced, but not hot). Served with tortillas, rice and beans.
B) Beef'lbstada Compuesta and Beef Burrito $5.95
A crtsp corn tortilla lopped with beans. beef, lettuce, tomato
and guacamole .• Served with a beef burrito and rice.
C) Taco and Enchilada Combination .. • · $5.25
Our most popular combinatJon Your choice of a chicken or.bee(
taco with a delicious cheese enchilada. Served with rice and beans.
C06ta Mua. 1262 S.E Bristol St. (I ml. ~Uth of South Coast Plaza). 1754·652&
Garden Grow • 12101 Valley View St. (On Valley View 50Uth o( Chapman Ave.) • 193·7513
f
at 10:00 a.m.
Carloads of merchandise
bargains and a carnival
of fun! ~
·Beach Blvd. at McFadden
..
'Wrench-ed'
• excess in
Laguna Beach
It must have been a gut·\\Tenching decision given the state
of financial affairs. in Laguna Beach. But rdur of the five ~embers.of council f!lade the tough decisi9n Wednesday to ttght~n the bolts -as it were -Qn emergency preparedness in thec1ty.
They voted to dip into the city's state-mandated reserve
fund to buy 5.z.CXX> wrenches and I 0 000 emergencv preparedness booklets for;) 14,675. · :"I
. The. reserve fund is not to be treated lightly. According to
Caltfom1a law. four of the five council members had to concur to
wrench funds from this account. '
The biz whizzes on the council decided they'd buy and resell
them to Lagunans who would then use them to close the valves
on their natural gas lines in times of crisis-Jilce earthquakes or m~d slides. Th~y will charge $3 per wrench. That may be a good
pnce for a reliable tool that never needs adjustment and is
guaranteed to make that quarter-turn to the off p<?S1tion quickly
and qui~tly. But a wrench that will do the same JOb can be found
for less m most hardware stores -and in almost ev.ery house in
the country. ·
According to the Southern California Gas Co. there were
7.891 active gas customers in the-city of Laguna Beach as of
August. By ordering 5,000 wrenches, the city seems to be
presuming that 63 percent ofits citizens are in need of a method
for shutting off their gas valves. ,..
For sugge~ting the ob':ious -that this plan doesn't make
much economic sense - City Manager Ken Frank wasl>ublicly
chastized by Councilwoman Bobbie Minkin for rus "squirrely
marketin~ i~eas." .
The mc1dent would amount to httle more than an amusing
example of cockeyed government, if it weren't for the revelation
that the city•s Emergency Preparedness Committee Chairman
Harry Huwns -the guy who urged the council to get into the
wrench business -is a professsional consultant who makes his
livina telling people bow to react to emergencies. The city paid
Huggi':ls ~200, although it is unusual to pay members of civic
comrmss1ons.
. A commission that recommends courses of action to a city
council should have only the interests of the city at heart. If 1t
needs the services of a consultant, it should hire one and
maintain its independence.
The potential for a conflict of interest should have been
sufficient cause for the council to reconsider this silly plan. The
fiscal reality that there is not enough money in the city treasury
to pay for it should have been sufficient cause to cancel it.
None of this is likely to surprise veteran council watchers in
Laguna. who have often accused their city government of
"wrench-ed" excess.
LETTERS
Apathy no problem
for resldents ln HB
To the Editor:
last · Monday night about 500
people met at the deadend ofSpnna-
dale Street. They brought their own
chairs and listened for over two hours
to imponant speakers such as Dennis
Brown, Hamet Wieder and Don
Troy. These were citizens against
movina PCH inland in Huntinaton
Beach, up against their homes.
I would not have believed that
Realtor Don Troy, could have as-
sembled sucb a huge group of home-
owners in such hot welther. Troy has
collected over $36,000 for CARP
(Citizens Apinst Rerouting PCH).
Businessmen are taJc.tng off from their
jobs to attend mectin~. Ladies arc
carrying flyers door-to-door in this
extremely hot weather. Some talented
men . are pouring o~r maps and
drafting better soluuons to the Bolsa
Chica problem. I have never seen
such great organization and team
effort. These dedicated homeowner'$
can move mountains and build
bridges. They are fiahtinJ to continue
beina first class citizens m this beach
city and not outsiders behind a Berlin
Wall ... (Wall to be built next to PCH).
. JEANNE COLLINS
Huntington Beach
.. . .
SEAR CHLIGHT
Ic e cream makers fool public
into acce pting fake vanilla
Dessert fans tricked Into
accepting Imitation of_fe'r-rt_n_gs _____ _
Do you cat ice cream? If so, what
flavor do you prefer -chocolate,
strawberry or vanilla?
Accordmg to ice ctcam manufac-
turen. there is as much demand for
"vanilla" ice cream as for the other
two flavors combined. But, uruess
you are much sharper than most ice
cream eaters, you never get any real
vanilla ice cream. What you get is a
synthetic "Oavor" which should
P.roperly be labeled "imitation van-
1lla ... Usually, the flavoring extract
goes by the name of "arullin. At the current price of ice cream. even in
drug store dispensaries; i1 is difficult
to understand why this synthetic
flavor is used.
One person in the business satd to
me, "What do you care, so long IS it
tastes like varullar·
Answer. "No, it doesn't. Your taste
buds are not stimulated. They"re just
fooled. You take a spoonful of
vanillin ice cream. It melts in your
mouth and releases tbe perfume
which causes the olfactory nerves to
say, 'that smells like vanilla.· And so at
does. But the taste is missing."
Many years ago, in most eastern
seaboard states, the demand was for
"speckJed" vanilla. All ihat meant
was that the vanilla beans were
ground up and put into each batch of
vanilla ioe cream as it was made. Real
vanilla comes from an orchid and the
fruit does. indeed, look like a "bean "
And when the beans arc ground to the
fineness of dust particles, they stt mu-
late the taste buds as well as the
olfactory nerves.
What little I know about 1cc cream
making I learned as a vacationina
school boy in an ice house on the
Missoun River in Sooth Dakota.
My grandfather was the managing
partner ot a group of Chamberlain
businessmen who operated the ice
hou~.
In winter there would be deep
crusts of acc. The crew would sav. th ts
ice into huge blocks and store them
until the heat ot the summer came
along.
The foreman, winter and summer.
was a delightful guy named Joe Kelly.
In winter he bo 9Cd tbe icccuttcrsaod
in summer they became ice cream
makers and soft dnnk bottlers.
Joe was a purist. One day he told my grandfather he
was going to quit. Grandfather asked·
why.
'Tll tell you. Mr. Laughlin.·• Joe
replied. "Your board has decided to
use that stinking imitation vanilla.
Well. I'm sorry. sir, but there will be
no stink instead of vanilla in am ice
cream of mine." ·
As a choice between Joe and the
small increase 10 profit, the board
decided it preferred Joe.
As a boy I used to visit my
grandparents dunna summer va-
cation from school. 1 spent all the time I was allowed to at the .. plant.··
The process of making ice cream was
quite different from what it is now.
Joe would simply load up some huge
cylindrical cans, pour in the mixture
and insert a float. Then an electric
motor would tum the Ooat and the
can in opposite directions inside an
ice pack. The ice cream was never
frozen solid. When 1t got to the
consistency of "soft ice cream,·· the
float was removed and manually
scraped into the cyhnder. There was
always a little of the soft ice cream left
cling.mg to the float, and this WIS put
into \'Owls which the small kids who
constantly surrounded Joe were al-
·WALTER
Bu11oucHs
lowed to consume.
Joe liked kids and he would invent
small chores for them to "earn" a dash
of the soft real vanilla ice cream.
What's all this got to do with the
Orange Coast?
Well. mirabale dictu, happ) da)s
arc here again.
You can now buy real ,·amlla ice
cream right here at home.
No doubt the daJrymen •ho Wt're
sm rt enough to do this are charging
more fo r at. but tt's worth 1t, I V.'On't
tl) to tell )OU the brands; but tf the
ad,:enisen for the stores "'ho handle
at arc as sman as the) claim to be,
they"ll be advertising it
Just before the war, the head of the
Standard Vanilla Co. of Los Angeles
dCCJded to use pure vanilla as a
promotton. He had seen the soda
fountam decorations that I had
syndicated $0 he called me.
AD anist named Bill Risbebe.rger.
who later became my good friend. did
some gorgeous point-<>f-sale ad\'ert1s-
ing for the produce which was called
"Orcovan. ••
With the war ove!i. both Bill and l
moved to Orange Lounty. Bill be-
came art director for Rockwell, and I
-well, )OU ~now about me. l just
conunucd in the newspaper business.
No creat shakes. but there is
enough monc) in it so 1 cao have a
dtsh of real vanilla ice cream now and
then.
Walur B•rrou1bs 11 IM Pi.Joi ..
lomulbl1 pabllsb~r.
JACK A!IDICIUIO• col•••a.t
D uke
f ails .
to keep
word
Gov. DeukmeJuin ran for office t~o years o a champion of toulh
law enforl%nlent. And this tan • .R~
publicans e" erywhere arc runnan& as
def endet'$ of the .. traditJonal Amcn-
can family"' and all u :stands for. Therc·s one agency in Cahforina
government where law enforccmc:nt
and the intemu oflhe family come
together more than &JlYVw'hcre else.
That's at the Department of Fair Emplo)'ment and Housing. whose job
includes enforcement of state la\\"S
banning discrimination in hOUS1'1J-•
So iM t>FEH ay well be the
barometer of how much this Re-
publican administration mcant·What
1t sard "hi le campaign.in
Thal' because laws against hous-
ing discrimination were expanded
just two )eat'! ago to include protcc--
tion offamilies W1tb children. Owners
of homes and aparunents cannot
lcpll) ref u to rent to a famil) us1
because children are involved.
status of mobile home parts
uncertain.
Yet the "adults only" messqc is a
commonplace on building signs and
in the ads for \'aCllll apa.ru;ncnts
1Dc reason:~ one state depan-
ment ~itb uthorit~ lO enforoc the
law-the DFEH -has refused to do
so. both 1n the last few mon'th of -Gov.Jerry Brown ·s rqime and under
Deukm~1an.
That h:lli left la~ enforcement up to
local fair housing counals made _up
mostly of \Oluntecrs, groups '."·h~
don't even oomc close to bla.nket.ing
the state.
Unul this ummer. the DFEH
con islC'nth excused n.s inacuvn> ~
sa}1ngn ed the fund for an
enforcement effort, which could 1n
elude Jc, mg fi~ n t propeny:
wners th ult ~ poli ·
But in ihe budget paSJC'd b
legislators la I June. $200,000 Y.
earmarked for enforcement of cud
involving discnmtnauon a ainsf
families with children. Dcukmej1an promptly blue-pen-
ciled that sum. claiming the DFEH
already had enough mone) to handle
such cases. no matter what as said. ·
As early as last May, the depart·
mC"Dt apparently qrecd.; It an-
nounced that tt would begin taking
child discrimination cases on Sept. I
because of "the seriousness and
extent of the problem. For ex.ample;
discrimination against families wit
children pafticubrly afTeclS the lf'O"·
iog number of famthes headed by
women ho must compe~ for a sma.D
number of~ntaJ units."
But just one da) before that pohcy
shift was to occur. the depanment
cban~ ilS mind. cla.immi it wasn't ccna1n it had the authorit) to enforce
age discrimination Jaws because ofa
1983 ruling b an admi'n trati"e la
judge. He had said the l..cgislaturt
never mtendcd for the department to
handle this k.ind of case
C\i er mind that the OFEH k:new
Proposed bill would create 'emergency czar1 about that ruling last Ma) e\er
mind that the Legislature spoke au
mind quite clear!) when 1t budgete<s
$200.000 for JUSl such enforttment.
"This 1s a classical ex.ample of
FEMA chief Giuffrida seeks a uthority
over all other agencies in a disaster -JACK .
WASHINGTON -Civil defense
ha come-a-long way. baby. Wm: disaster isn't as funny as it sounds. ·~
Ecrtainiyit's ~m1tatctn·senou ly a1--1111uEISOl-
World War JI. when volunteer air-
ra1d wardens ~ourd ring neiah·
borhood doorbells to report cracks of
light showina during blackout tests.
The successors to the friendly aar-
reJd wardens want nothing less than
to run the country along the lines of a
military dictator hip in case of an
emeryne). . ..
federal Emergency Managcmenr
Agency Director Louis G1uffnda. a
California National Guard aeneral
Who hkcs to bC addrc sed by his
milit~r}' title. has already been
lapped down for his erclens1ons by
Attome) General Wilham French
• mith.
FEMA.
' My associates Donald Goldbcrc
and Indy Badhwar have obtained
FEMA 's blueprint for the takeover. a
draft of "standby'' lqislauon ••to
provide the faccutive Branch with
the authorities oeccssary to meet
various conOict continatncies."
Titled the Defense Resources Art,
t law would-~st unprcocdcnted
power in the preltdcnt -who \\ould
.Qrcsumably dt'leptc his authonty to
Gen. Giuffnda and his aJorifiC'd air· rai<l wardens.
The propostd ltaaslation would
fcnse purposes." No d1ckenna. no
delays: "Upon or 1f\crthccondemna-
tion pehtion. immediate possession
may be talcn and the property ma) be
occup1ed." Thcrt goes the neigh-
borhood. •Throw ·hoarders m jail. Ac·
cumulauon of aood .. rn cxc of
rta.\O'nablc demands" by bus1n ,
fam1bes or indl\ idu ls v.'Ould bnna a
$10.000 fine or a )car m-prison.
•Nat1onalize all Jobs. Emplo)-
. ment ~ould be limited to "activities
essential to the national health. safcty
orintere t." An}onecaught I) ing to a
aovemment official about the avail-
ability of manpower would draw a
I 0-,-000 fine-~ t YffkA pn~. •Outla~ tnles .\U worken cov·
ercd b) the emergenc) legisl3llon -
•Nationalize the rueans ot pro-
duction. If a factory o~ncr fails to
produ~ v.-hat the go,emmcnt J1 -
late , the prcsidcnt "ma) tale im-
mediate posse~ ion of such plant,
mine or fac1lit) and operate it for the
production of such material or
$Cniccs as may be necns&l')."'
b3Frttze all "' pnccs. fees.
oomm1ss1on nd rent~. and control
all consumer crtd1t by prr:s1dent1al
decree.
h• h --~ 11 ., bureaucrauc loot--Oraggi!\4;' fu w 1c • as noto.a. means a "'or..crs, Mad Bro"'n, a top otlkial of
period -~ould be made to ·gn California Rural Lqal A 1 ta
affidavits that the) had ne\erenpged Foundation. ··The., ha\e look~
in a stnke against the go\emmcnt and ) ear.. for wa), to ~et around enforc-i arc not members of any emplo\ec the law.
group that a 'em the right to __ su_c_h_a __ ··_._T=h-~ nc,·cr \ked fQ.r Qil.O ~~---...-trike. ~ long "'uh persons "'ho ad" oc:llt "hen the L.q1~laturt' ga\'t '' to tbCro. the ., ioknt oH•rthrov. of the o' cm-the) did nothing to pre\ cnt a 'cl
ment. stnkcrs would be fined up to DcukmeJian ha clcarl) put pe<>plc _,_. ,__ chargieofthe DFEH whoare()pt~id S 1.000 and-<>r impn \on~• ~. to the purpose of the department.•
Footnote Stncr-FEMA 's draft Bro"' n call the OFEH ··mcom
tcgi lallon t\ a standb> propo I. 11 tent. 1up1d or mahcaou ... th y are
wall not be offered to Cong~ ahefld doing the worst job of any :ncy 10
of time -"'hen it could be (,tate.govcml:J;lent. ..
thorough!. dcbated -butonl~ '"the Even 1fthat hetonc 1 rbit1 tro
c-.ent ofa nauonal eme nC)'.' 'hen 1fsoomplctclyc rttii\ DcW:m~wi
Collgl'C\ ~ould . uPi>oS(dl)' be: n· and bt' appotntte -a"o ~ d
i ed into '-Olln& for 1 dictat •P. enders of both the f:umf) ud la.,.
J•d IN cnforttment -are doing no1h1 at
~· !st all to help man) famih '1111 children ho" nt nolhi more than
a place to lhe. n. • u ·• SUr.t 11411mlc:it
NH'4 tel r 09 bl~ I --.
Oiuffnda' propo I to 11vc FEMA
authonty over ever) other go • cmmcntal ncy in a en 1s would
make him an "emcrg~ncy cur,"
'mnh wrote.
u pend the Con,utution and the 8111
of Riaht$, efTc<1h'tly climmatc pn·
vatc property, 1boltsh frtt~~
and gcneralh• damp the American
people in 1 totahtanan vtSC. Herc arc
some of the spcc1fk outrqa FEM
has m ton: for us. aetordin& to the
randby lcgi'\latton: Calls for help often just dry runs
The idea of the h ttle· known he tl of
a little-known federal ncy runnma
the country 1n t1mc of"' r or natur 11
ORANGE COAST
lllllJ Pillt
r
•Instant confi lion of real estate
or personal prorcny "that hall be
deemed n ry for nauo~ de-
H. L. lchwer1a Ht
Fr• Zlnl
.... t °'
Tom. Taft
0 yE 0t
..
one out of the Disne kin
windllng movie market, invasion produce millions from new ener·
ations of filmgocrs.
attempts by investors plague company Times changed. The baby boom
ended. The movie audience was
dominated by tcen~ers who oaned
'.bad followed the founder' the .. kid's tufl .. of ~sney movies.
phil ophy. A ·c tenet: ··we 0 Yet the compan) continued rework· yBOBTDOMAS .c ... , 'I' ,,._
EDITOR' NOTE: Thom has
rcpotted tbe \Valt Disney st~I)' for
morr than 40 ~r< •~ AP's Holly·
Wood correspondent. He also is the
author of Disne> 's authoriLcd bio-
~phy.
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -What ha
happened to Di ney1
The question i heard in Holly-
wOod, on Wall Street and around a
world that h s delighted in the
tudio•s enchanted make-believe for
three &cnerations.
The pant corporation -which
ptoneered animation into an art form
and theme parks into a national
pastime -is in no danger of
ctisapi>carina. But the 60-yru-otd
magic of Walt Disney appears to be
• vanisfling under a spell cast by a
&J:Owina gana of financial demons. .
AmODJ them: takeover attempts br
outside investors seeking to sell off
ttie assets; shakeup of top manage·
ment; dwindlina of the Disney movie
market; lower attendance at the
theme park.s; threatened strikes at
Disneyland and Disney World.
Ten years ago, the picture was far
different Disney movies, Disneyland
and Walt Disney World were thnv-
ina. all divisions of the corporauon
showed increasioa profits. The pros-
pect of the EPCOT Center in Aorida
and a Tokyo Disneyland excited
investors. There seemed no limit to
the m-Jic that bad entranced three
generations.
Future historians may point to
~t. 13, 1979, as the beginning of the
Distiey decline. That was the day Don
Bluth and t 0 other· key animators
Walked out of the studio to form their
own company. Bluth complained
that the new management had ••tum·
cd its back on the principles of Walt
Dimey."
lick 'em with product." • mg the old formulas.
Many times W It Disney expressed •·t hate like hell to repeal myself."
that credo s his secret ofsurvival in Walt used to say ... After I m de 'The
the film jungle, Survive he did, Three Little Pip,' the theater auys
though sometimes just birely. For the !.lid. 'Give us more pigs!' Aftcr'Snow
first )0 years of his studio he wa:i in White' they said, 'Give us mo~
hock to the bank. He even had to dwarfs!' Dammit, I w nt to do
borrow on his life insurance to build something new!" ,
Disneyland. Attemp1in1 to reach tfle youth
· "fhe a~"'ersary Walt wa~ alway market, the Di ney studio in t 979
. trying toi1ck ~s the bank, Like many made an expensive spece film, "The
who grew up in the rural Midwest., he Black Hole " but it proved a pale
had a built-in suspicion of bankers. imitation of "Star Wan." .. TRON"
When Walt souaht a 'oan so he could tried to cash in the video game craze.
finish his first animated feature, but it failed to excite the youna crowd.
"Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs,•• "Somethina Wicked This Way
the bankers resisted. Comes " a venture into the occult
... Yo1frc the kjnd of people wh~ was a t~taHulure. '
gne a gu)' an umbrella, then take 1t . . away when it.rains," Walt snapped.· . TheD1sney~tud10.had~lwa)"t;>cen
He got his loan . tightly run, with no outsiders aiven · , , autonomy or a share of the profits. Over and over again, R?Y Disney, That worked in Walt's time, but the
who handled the company s finances, movie business has chanced. All
found the !!'oney o ~s brother could studios now make pannersh1ps ~th
make t~e product. the tra1lblanna independent film makers, who enJOY enterta1~ment that ~ould elevate artistic freedom as well as profit
Walt Disney Productions to a new participauon
plateau. Walt's successors failed to · follow his philosophy of producing Steven Spielberg. Georae Lucas
new and innovative product. and ~ther young filmmakers.&JCw up
Consider Walt's pioneering: the adonng Disney films and miaht well
first sound cartoon ( .. Steamboat have worked for ~e company. But
Willie"); the first color cartoon they took t~e1r blockbusters
("Flowers and Trees"); the first e~wherc, rcalizina. they ~uld never
animated feature ("Snow White") enJOY freedom at Disney. Only an the
the first successful nature films ("Scai past three years h~ve mdependents
Island")· lhe best combination of been welcome at Disney. hvc-acti~n and cartoon ("Mary Po~ . Last spring's "Splash!" was th~ first
pins"). Plus Disneyland and his hit .Produced under the new hberal
original contributions to television. policy. The autumn release, "Coun·
Of course it would be impossible to try," is another promising fil_m. Both
duplicate the creative aenius of Walt are released by Touchstone Film~. the
Disney. But in the years following bis new . trademark for mature Disney
death in 1966, the company seemed movies.
to adopt the strategy of "play it safe." The new look at Disney may have
Indeed. some observers feel the
current woes might have been
avoided if heirs to the Disney empire
For several years it worked. Dis-come too late. Hostile investors could
neyland and Walt Disney World were dismantle the company and sell assets
gold mines. Disney movies were worth billions. The result would bring
embt'a()ed by families dismayed by serious-perhaps mortal -harm to
the risina tide of racy movies. The a 60-ycar legacy of American enter·
library of animated features could tainmenl Walt Dlaney and •Mickey lloue• ln 198§ me photo. --
..
e·
I
•
Of all the Filter cigarettes you can choose, one offers you
something special. Camel Filters. You get a smooth smoke, ot_
course, but you also get the great flavor that's a Camel exclusive.
Enjoy a diff~rent kind of Filter and a new kind of smooth-try
Today's Camel Filters.
TODAY'S
CAMEL FILTERS
Its a whole new world.
16 m . .. • ~ 2 m rucoune av per -..retta W FTC method.
' Warning : The Surgeon Gefleral Has Determined
That Cigarette Smo~ng Is Dangerous 10 ¥our.Health
Mom takes
detention
for ailing
daughter
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) -
. Susan Duran figured it wasn't fair for·
San<lia High School to discipline her
dau&hter when she didn't call the
11rl's illness in pn time, so she took the
punishment herself -two days in
detention hall.
From 8 a.m to 3 p.m., the 34-ycar·
old businesswoman sat at a too-small
desk. readina and eatina. lo keeping
with the rules of "el toril," or the
bullpen, as the detention ball is
known, she wasn't allowed to ta.Uc.
sleep or act up without permission. ·
The detention :Thunday and Fri·~
day bad been meted out to Duran's
tecn-ase dau~ter, Stephanie, for
being absent without permiuion. But
Duran said it was her own mistake
that had caused the problem.
Stephanie was sick Monday and asked her mother to call the school
and report her as absent with per·
mission. School policy makes stu·
dents liable for detention if absences
aren't called in by 2 p.m. the same
day, but Duran didn't call until 2:30
p.m.
"They said they were sorrv, but
2:30 was too late," Duran saici:'•They
said Stephanie wouJd have to serve
two days in the buJlpen, even if it was
mr,error.
'I told them, you don't do that to
my kid. ..
She araued that tf the idea is to
teach students responsibility; then
she should sit in the bullpen beeause
she was responsible for Stephanie•s
unexcused absence.
The school took her at her word.
"We &et calls all the time from
parents who say, •Don't punish my
kid,"' said Assistant Principal Vin-
cent Hoffman. "But in 30 ycan of
education, rve never seen anyth\na
like this."
Duran said .she gained some in·
siahts, watching the detention hall
teacher handle students who make it
clear they'd rather be somewhere else •
.. After my first day, seeina what she
(the teacher) aoes throu&h, I told her I
wouldn't take her job if they paid me $100,000 a week and pve me five
aides who look like Tom Selleck," she
said.
Prop. 39
a rilysteiy
TU DAY. SEPT M R 25 1
Devfces give more feeling to sound
. . .
Innovations Improve testing,
daily Hf e for ard of hearing
BJ SU AN MONAHAN
~,... c.,,..,~ ...
Reoe1ving and transmnting oommunicat1on is a day-
to-day frustration for the deafor hearing-impaired person.
But recent improvements in diagnostic and treatment
tools plus an army of devices used to amplify or substitute
for sound are making iilhe
audit~ world more aca
cessible. •
Speech ond langu~
pathologist Mnry Beth
Schade says thJlt sophisti-
cated equipment will not
Schade crcd 1 ts a sound and tacttl«levice known as the
"fonator" with fQme of her more dramatic successes.. ''It'
rcaUy helping us to refine &he hard-of·hearina Cluld's
pcec:h;' she said, explainina that &he beSt results arc
achieved with younger patients.
The tberapi I can adjuS1 the sound level to
accommodate the patient's :hcarina losa.;. and a headset
allows the &?aliCDt to lasten to the speaker without
distraction of b6Ck&f0und noise As the thmpist speab
into a microehone. the patient repeats 1he sounds; they
alltemate unul the sounds mate.Ii.
The fonatoralso hasa band-held Vibration disc, which
enables the hard-of-bearing or deaf person lo feel the
difference between sounds that cannot be nouC'Cd b) lip-
reading. ~· ·
.. For example, a hard •g' and 8 ..... sound are made
exactly the rne way m the mouth, .. Sch de id ... But 1f
you £lace your hand on your th(Oat when ;)IOU y ·coat' and !oai; you can feel the difference.
• The vabrauon disc also transmitnhat difference and,
with pnictioc, )'OU can use that memory of sound to
discnmmate bct.,.cen them in running speech."
A hearina aid of often the most obv1ous solution But
for a variety of rcasons-UlCludinf. cost and'vanit>,'-not
ev~one want to wear one. The pocket talker. • Which
consists of a headset, an amplifier the sile of a agarene pacbac and a microphone for the speaker, is the answer
for some people, SChade said.
"Often wMn the elderly So to the hospiud, the} forget
their heanng aidJ;, or maybe they don't·have one. This
dc\"lct h enabled doctors to communicate with paucnts. but it I ooouldbeusedby nksonn ny1Jtuauon~
peoele have to communa 1e. It's afTordabJe and simple'°
u~ . Another 1nnovat1on -a telev1s1on listcn1nadcvace-
allows the hard of h nng to prac:t1cc sdccthe listeJWW.
Unhke h 1111$ id, which mpltfies all wunds, u lets ck
listener tune anm the prqgram tbout 'umtnl YP
oocwaund notSt ··And nee u bas no cords, lhe user can hmn lO TV ui
the me room s a ~ v.bo is not hard .of hearin&. ..
Schade dded. Thi 1 because the sound as t.ransmmed
through ari 1nf ra-red bOx atop the TV set. The mtcaoPhoGC
nached to the tclevmon doem'l mcrease.lhe volume for
(Pleue eee HEAllDIG/a2)
replace the speech thera-
pist, "but it really helps us
do a better job •.. We can get
more accurate information
and we're better able to
communicate with the pa-
tient."
Who should.apologize for differences?
I f • •
Schade and Roger A. Simmons operate Hearing . About seven or
&. Spe«h of San Clemente. eight year~ ago,
Involved with pre-MARY BETH SCHADE Mark, an attorney lJ
schoolers and senior citizens, such as stroke victims, deaf friend of mine, asked -IDA
children and laryngectomy patients, she also conducts me to do 50me re-heanna screenina tests for power plant employees. search for him, rel-A. __ _
Before a client can be helped, thedegreeofhearingloss evant to my field of "'°""'
must be determintd. Becilusc this screening is so crucial, chology ... ••••••••••• Sc~dc is especially pleased about advances in the tcstina psy True t~ form I •
equipment • _,..
Until fairly recently, the therapist would rotate an came through. in de-
audiometer dial to produce a tone, and the patient would pen~ble ~ashion. . .. . .. .
,ive a hand si111aJ to indicate it was heard "I'd have to . You re OK..Lln~. said M_,ark. , What I like about
keep one eye on the equipment and one eye on the >OU as that you think hke a man.
__ paucnt." Schade id I was offended.
Now a microproc~sor-based dijital audiometer ven seven or eight yean aco, it not been
allo~s . her to se the patie_nt's ~ponse on a screen, popular for quite a while to compliment a woman for her
providing a more accurate diagnosis. so-called·"mnsculine thinkina."
I became uncharacteristically. speechless and Mark
responded w\lh laughter.
"Whal you should have said," he tutored me, ··v.as·
that I had responded with the sensitivity of a woman."
It was my tum to laugh.
Historically speakinc. Mark·s timing was perfect It
was during the 197Ch that men began to publicly express
an awareness of their own needs and to respond with
more sensitivity. As the .. new woman" was gi\'en
permission to . think, the ••new man" was pven
permission to foci.
We were upposcd to aim for androgeny -or at
least, equality -and the results were supposed to be
l~rating,; -
My thinking had been just as good as Mark's. Even
he had acknowledied that. It's clear to me. however, that
Dllr"9t ....... _, ...........
Gloria O.brlnk and 11arJ Ailn Wella are &lalrlee and Robert Ga&enbeliD, ~t. wllo Council of Immanotoa. ~ Dr. Sudhlr entbuwtlc about new medlcal 1roup. tioeted t• at their lJDda tale bome for Gupta wbo eaplalned p-oup •national goala.
If guests can 't .stan·d the heat. • •
... be thankful tea ref res hes
and black ties aren't requtrea
.. You'rcinvit:td to afternoon tea ... "
If you•rean ardent philanthropist, you've probably
received an enaraved note with that stiff-upper-lip
invitation in recent months.
Teas have been bot.
WelJquiteftankly. forsome, teas have become
synonymous with tedious.
Not so at the Guggenheim manse in Newport
Beach.
When Robert and Shirlee opened the tall white
doors of their an-and treasure-filled manse on Linda
Isle to chaner memt>crs of the new Council for
Immunology, there was more than Lipton and lemon
and tans; there were tine wines and an open bar to
quench hotScP,temberthirsts. ·
Vive la d1fference!
Minalina on the waterside ~tio with the council
members were Dr. Gale (Morrie) Graqer, professor of
immunology and Dr.S1dllh'G1~profcssorof
medicine at UC Irvine Medical Center, who explained
the specific goals Oft he Newpon Beach-based Natioilal
Society for lmmunolOaY (of which the new council will
act assuppon group).
They include public education on the immune
system and its role in the prevention and control of
disease; research and identification of products of the
system, and the ultimate construction of an Oranse
County patient caro facility for personsaffiictcd with
immunological disorders.
ScrvingonthenatiorialboaroarcManJ..s,.trow,
president; PepYCot• vice president: Albu Sliva,
council coordina.tor..P.mr Dkan. scat1ary; and rd
members Granger, Gupta and Gl•iia ~ RMert
Rad•rand Mal'J Au Wells.
National advisory board membenare Dr. Mltdtell
AatdD,NormaaAXene,DavtdBater,JoluaCUisty,
Su.ford Glukey, Sblrlee Gagenbelm, Donald ltoll,
Robert Osb~ Loats Rosso and Jagies Sternberg.
Among the new, by-invitation-onlychartermem-
benenjoyin& the tea were Barb.,a Alm ADclenoa,
Pllyllls Buer, Apet Blackled1e, Barbara Bowle,
Helen Coffey, Viet.I lrvtlle, Gloria Nord, Marge Sutton
andJoAaae Mix. • • • Marl&DDe Garner,co-chainnan of the recent RIO
brunch at the Rill, must have good connections with the
weather bureau. Two months ago she said, "The brunch
is a depanure from our two previous formal events. This
time, we are sparin& the men black ties in warm
weather." .
The men seemed to appreciate the gesture of
Gamer and Barbara Campbell as they (mostly no tie at
all) strolled about the Ritzparkm&lot under a hot sun
chcckiitaout the classic cars.
Amonathe~autics parked were Alan and Pat
lt7ptntt'I t950 Rolls-Rt>yttttatio~n.1.!2S R-R
coupe belongina to Dr. Georae Breuu, 811'0•
tPleueeee JUTZfB2>
Tb• 0.WMn ud 8cOtt Gray claecked oat a ..,,...,.......,,....~ •ae TJuanderblrd at RIO benefit bnlacb. M._arlle Steinman anid .. ..._._...,.. a la&ppJ moment amoftl th can.
we had aotten to the same place througl:t different
channels. . •• Hugh Hefner once • d, .. These chicks arc our
natural enemy. h's time to do battle with them. They are
unalterably opposed to the romantic boy.girl society lhal
Pla>'boY promotes."
Who said that different atutudcs necessarily equate
with conflict?
Just hke m ny{llen ... o in maeasininumbetsare
cxprcss111gd1soontent v.ith stereol)'Pical roles, l'maettiD&
tired ofbaving to pologize for bcing female _. and I think
l have o lot.d company.
My ideal sclfis aff ecuonattand admiring, 5\J'Ongand
masterful. It is interested tn m) bome and m>· Wodd. h
wants to make a mart on rn) man and on my life. It ii
gentle, tactful, sensual and eonciliatory. It likes pretty
clothes. y ideal self is ambitious. compet.ent •.. and
feminine.
I-don't think I have to compromise with or Bpol<>&ize
for my femininity to be a successful adult woman. My
attitudes surely differ from the men in my life, in tenain , '
areas, but 'th~ diff crcnces would be exploited toward
more positive goals. .
Dr. Af&azi is a marria&e and fmuly theJ'BJ'ist. in
Corona del Mar. Sbe ~'Cloomes your responses. If you
""ish a reply, please enclose a SUJmped, 'Sdf.~f~:~
envelope. Write ro LJnda Algazi. Ph.D., c/o Daily Pilot,
P.O. &u 1560, Costa Mesa:92626.
SWEAT SET
Re-evaluate
yourn~ed
for surgery
BRENNAN
CASSIDY
•ndtmtij
-
Leaping lizards! Each generation has wackiness
......... ~~~---t~~~~~~~~==::::==::==::::::::~~1
LA DER • tftbcrc
1 nyquesuon to
whcthcnhc u~om·
il)I ncrauon 1s
tota I) nut\) .1 ha\ c
justd1fleovcred the
answer. I us )CS
1.M·,ui~~~~---.._--~~----PIOb:lhlyJoseh1m.buubxsa>..J.k.<ll.toU~~~~;.:::.:.;::=... ...... .......:.:.;..c"Tirnti01:0li1iiiffiiirrlrut~rnl'P<!'lrn u n benr'llble
Al•
luDEIS
Enclosed 1sa chppinJ •••••••••••• from our local pa~r . (laurel, Mi'.\s,)w1tha t>icturcQfa kid who hn~ahve lizard
hanglngfrome chear.
The boy ys the lizards sta) damped on until he '
removes them. He thinks ifs a great idea because his
carrin&sarcuniqueand he doesn't have to have his ears
pierced-Just batten. Haveyoueverheardof anything o
crazy in your en tare hfe?-WORRIED ABOUT OUR
Wh t dvice nyouoffer'?-UPST T~.N.Y.
DEAR N. \'.:I 1 ~c& yoa laaYe aevu aeea Lee'•
fri d D4aredr fiDgll.llltpo 1lbletovl1ltLff fora
wttkend and atay In a botel or motel? J believe oace ~°'
are to tbe company of yoar 10D ud Ill• f neiHI ... '"tut tbey bebave DO 41111 really In P41bUc &MD otlaer male
companions, yoo wlll feel lest terrified aad apprelaenilve.
Please &tve It a try. ••• , DEAR ANN LANDERS: My 16-year-old(6·foot-2)
son ju t walked out of the hOuse. I am sitting here with a
heavy hcan. In the last two days he has done the following:
( l) Cut a b11 hole in my best tablecloth with a
J•ckil.nife. (2) De troyed thl'l'c b II point pens by breaking them
benc
Hcha bcendo1n9thingsltkethisevcumcehcY. 1l
hlllcbo,). I havebqgcdh1m tt>comewith mc10 mental
he Ith cit me but he sa)'5 thue 1s nothina wron with him
lncvtryotherway he is a wonderful younaman-
docsn'tdrinlcordodruas,10-.e animals and has many
fnends I wonderifb ICP'etlybatcimc51ncemo tofthe
dama&c is done to my belongt,n&S. He has had n'b mole role
model i.incc he was 3. Myotherch1ldrqlf':lre not
deMructivc. nor am J. Please advise in \he paper. He reads
your column. -PEOP.1:.E NEXT? (ORE.)
DEAR ORE.: Tills HlfY boy needs tb flod oat wbere
bis ra1e 11 coml•I from. You eu'c drag la.Im to tlterapy, ba&
I bope wlaeD lie Ifft "11 letter lie wUJ agrtt to 10. ll co aid
bead off real trouble. Good l•ck.
SHOWERS FORECAST FOR MEN HEARI NG ADJUSTED •••
From Bl .
I'd hke to put )OU in the mood for
this column.
Imagine you're a part of a militant
group of women marching around the
park holding banners that read.
"UNISEX BABY SHOWERS' LET
IT RAIN ON MEN'S PARADES."
and "EVERY TOILET BOWL
COULD USE A FEW GOOD MEN!"
Standing on a tree stump 1s a
woman shouting. "Wedding and
baby showers have done more to bold
women down in the depths of
oppression than any other single
custom in our society. (SHOUTS OF
"RIGHT ON, SISTER!")
"Think of it! When you receive
from vour future mother-in-law a gift
of matched pots and pans, a
cookbook, a dozen dishtowels and a
cute little scouring-pad holder. who
ERMA
Bo11Ec1
do you think will be using them? Her
precious son?" (WOMEN BEGIN
SHAKING TREES IN ANGER
AND PULLING OVER ST A TUES
SHOUTING, "NO!")
The television crews for the six
o'clock news move in for a tight shot.
"Men a.re nowhere near a baby
shower when )OU get all those feeding
spoons and plastic bibS and carriers to
strap on your back. Why? Because
they'll never use them. I say women
will never be free until both members
· of the union attend showers and.share
in all tho c gifts that keep giving."
(POLICE ·HA VE TO BE SUM·
MON ED AS WOMEN TR\ TO
TURN OVER A BUS.)
Now, I'm a rcalJsuc woman. Some-
how I don't see men sitting around at
a unisex wedding or baby shower in
this decade. But what is reasonable
llre wedding and baby showers for
men who can at least ~ct some feeling
of what it is hke to share
responsibilities.
ll would warm my heart to see the
daddy of the bride give bis future son-
in-law a tool box, a lawn mower, or a
cute little can of cleanser to uncloa the
si nk.
His fnends could send him on his
honeymoon with dreams of a new
RITZ BRUNCH •••
From Bl
Tll'llatzer'1 '68 Ferrari Spider and a '59 Mercedes which
Ingrid Bergman once owned.
Getting a lot of attention was the •29 Stutz Phaetom
from Briggs Cunningham Museum. Dr. Al and Patsy
Clark hstened as Director Jolla Barges1 sang the praises
of this automobile which could go 90 mph, he said, and
not ruffie the passengers' hair because the J.lass was
angled ... There's nothing new in automobiles today
except the electronics," Burgess said, explaining that the
car had p0wer brakes and fou r speeds.
Besides thecars, llie 250gucstsenjoyed Dixieland
music by a Barry Cole group, cocktails and hors
d'oeuvrcs. But, the real enjoyment came when they
entered the air-conditioned Ritz to be greeted by Hans
and Charlene Prager(she'sa member of the Newpon
chapter ofRIO) and were served a sit-down gourmet
brunch .
.. Everything ... food. linens. service ... has been
donated today. All of the money goes to the
Rehabilitation Institute of Southern California," Hans
said. (Since its incepuon in 1982, the Newport chapter
has raised more than $125.000 with the help of Prager
and the Ritz staff.)
The menu included papaya, quail with cbampa,ne
cabbage, toumedo offilet mignon, scrambled eggs wnh
chives and profiteroUes with chocolate (the latter a must
when you dme at the RllZ).
RIO member Kit Rutter. J ohn Rutter and
Shella Mcindoe anticipated gourmet brunch.
Jean Baker was there talking about her son's
upcoming weddmg in Scattlewith Margie Steinman
(both had worked on the brunch). Others enjoying the
food and fun were Betty Belden, Jackie and Jlm
Rodgen, Marianne's husband Jack and daughters
Shannon Stewart (from Hawaii) and Meg Garner,
Dorothy and Tom Doan, Bob and Marilyn Mcintyre,
Crowd delighted to share
'house' with the Gatlins
Larry and brothers
stretch two shows
at the Crazy Horse
Uenver" to name a few. Lan) was so delighted that he
While the band and brothers Ste-.e whirled Smets into the aisle and the
and Rudy took a break. Lan) feeling was mutual.
confided to the audience that he was Steven Gatlin took more liberty
working on a duct for W1lhe Nelson. with lyncs which ~romgted stronger, "a m-!11-st.ar" and h1msdf. "a staret --mimed responses om rother Rudy.
After performing at the Greek te," to record. Tying a bandana Clappingand therumbleofcowboy
Theatre Friday and an arena in around one microph9ne to reprc~nt boots resulted in three encores and Nelson, he proceeded to sing both · ~ l. N Concord Saturday, Larry Gatlin and parts. with proper nasal twang, of reinforced the good time ice mg. o
the GatJin Brothers came "home" to "Best Friends" about two men who one wanted to go home.
the 250-scat Crazy Horse restaurant like the same woman. Larry obli$ed by offering a hint of a
in Santa Ana Sunday. Larry's second solo was an song he's wnting for Merle Haggard.
Their visit thoroughly dehghted alphabet song with the 26 lyrics After his impromptu run-through of
two packed houses and Marti Smets countnficd JUSt enough to make 11 a the lyncs. the instrumental accom-
of Mission VieJO who may still be little catchier than the "Sesame paniments were improvised and the
reeling from her tum m the spothght Street" version and a good crowd record-to-be quicldy passed Gathn's
dancing with Urry. unifier. test for a hit song; An audience can
He called the small venue a "hvmg Fortunatel). dunng the second set sing it after hearing it once.
room" and. indeed. the 9:30 p.m. one liability of a small house _ an Finally it was the band's tum: ..
show was hke a folksy pany1hat kept unavon:labtt. •'ovcrscrved" couptc in Ste.v~-Smilh,-.PauLAn.a.slaSlO and
getting better as the evening pro.-the front row -left. Smcts' party Shannon Ford jammed on the lead
gressed. quickly claimed the prime scats. guitar, fiddle and drums. respect1ve-
First came 60 minutes of the Performers and fans were o relieved ly. Mike Smith strummed "Danny
.commercial fare. starting with six No. that the intended finale. "All the Gold Boy .. on the dobro and Ralph Worley
I hit sinaJes -"Broken Lad >." in Cahfomia." instead was the start of Geddes detoured from "Misty" into
"M1dn1ght Choir" and "Houston to the post-rty. ragtime on the keyboard. ----=-----------...;.;;;.;_:;_;;,.;;.;_.s;..;;.;~-------~ As the lights came up. the crowd
1tood in an ovation urging the Gatlins
to return to this appreciative "home"
more often.
Friday. Oct S
Slhuda1. Od 6
BSA TStllVAB
9 30 1111 ~ha11t
Rabbt Leonard Ros nthal • Pres Harry Woodcoff
• 617 Hamilton • Costa Mesa
714·631-6232
.
NO BOTTLED WATER
lnexprMhle
and Conv nlent
Dflnktna tcr .Syst ms
for Ho~ and Profe! tonal u
CALL NOWI
stepl~dder:z an alarm clock with his
own set 01 headphones, and his own
set of lua wrenche~ awaiting his
return.
Think how choked up he'd be with
a gift bolt of charcoal grill cleaner, a
book on how to paint your own home
on weekends. and a gift certificate for
two SO-pound bags of lawn fertilizer.
Why shouldn't men have the thrill
of a baby shower? He should have his
own bottle warmer, cany-;all bag, and
unassembled beds and swings.
I don't want to be selfish about
marriage and children. I want men to
know what it's like to break 1 S
ribbOns dunng a shower and wonder
if it's an old wives' tale or tf he may
just have 1 S children to support.
Women' Pleaset Would you keep
the cheenng down?
an)'one bul the person wearina the headset. • AleJtander Gra~m Bell hoped t~t the telephone would make life e s1cr
for the deaf~ he seems to be bclatedlr:gettina his wish. U ing a Tele.Phone
Cotr.munication Device for the Deaf (TDD). someone can t)-pe a mossage on
a keyboard hooked to th~ phone and have the P-Crson on the other.end rca~ 1l
on his or her TDD screen.
Ponable versions of this system arc suit.able for relaying short mcs53ges.
The buttons on the phone serve as the keyboard and the message is printed on
a small screen slipped over the handset. For the hard of hearing, phone amplifiers that look like standard hand ts
can be attached to any modular phone.
Then there are devices to help the deaf or bard of hearing cope with
situations in which most of us take our hearing for granted.
The hard-of-hearing mother, noted Schade1 can invest in "The Cry Baby
Alert." A microphone placed near the baby's cnb will trigger a loud buzzer or
a flashing light if the child cnes. Alarm clocks, smoke detectors, door and
phone bells also are manufactured with extra loud buzzers and flashing liahts.
"The deaf arc very keyed in visually," said Schade, so they tend to be more
responsive than a he,aring person to a flashing light.
Before investing in a device to enhance bearing, she advised, it's best to
consult a professional to help you choose the right equipment and learn to use
it properly.
Bob and Dottle Meserve, Betty Hogan, Alex and
Barbara Bowie, Dottie and Glen StiUwell, Pbil and
Mary LyoDI and Ra11 and Lhlda Kidder.
tlic state, The California. The event gets underway at
6:30 p.m. with the casino, n<rbost bar, buffet dinner and
entertainment included in the $37.50 per person ticket.
Numbers to call for tickets are Newport Harbor Area
Chamberofcommerce, 644-8211, Nautical Heritage
Museum, 661-l 00 I or Ticketron, 634-1300.
Paparazzi is edited by Daily Pilot Style Editor Vida
Dean. -
Editor's Note: The following announcements were
sarbled by the computer in Sunday's Paparazzi column.
They are repeated here in their entirety.
Several hundred people are.expected to turn out
Friday at the Registry Hotel to honor a lady who can't be
there. She is too large to fit. Undaunted by her absence
and size, supp0ners arc under full sail to raise fun and
funds at a Casino Night to benefit the official tallship for
---aoa NEWS. ua.. 0 HART TO HART G> TltAEE'8 OOWNtf
(I) THE DU(£8 Of HAlZAAD
6D BU8N8S AEPORT '90CEANUS
(l)CllNEWS
teCNEWS m DICK YAN DYKE
<C>MOYE ** "Y•. Giofgio" (1982) LUQlllO
Pavarotti, Kallvyn Hanold.
(H)MOYIE • * "Last Plane Out" ( 1983) Jan.
Mlcl'IMI Vincent, Mary CrOlby. <OlM<ME * * "Strenge Brtw'' (1983) Dew Thomas, Rick MOrltllS
)MOVIE * * "Romantic COmedy" (1983)
Dud1'y Moote. Ma.y Steenbufgen.
-8:30-
G) AUCE
fD MM:ie..1 LEHREA
NEWSHOtJR
CD HUMNITE8 THAOUGH THE
ARTS (I)~
THAEFS CfMPNff
WHEEL Of FORT\JNE
• DICK YAN DYKE
-7:00-
f) CISNEWS
O teCNEWS
U lOYEBOAT
D AICNEWSQ O IW.LM e THAEF8 OOWNtf a> WHEEL Of FORTUNE CD YOYNJE. Of THE MU
Cl) P .Iii. MAGAZINE 9 ENTtRTAINMENT TONOHT
JEJ:JPAJ'lrl( m FACES a PLACES
-7:15-
• • •
' Los Angeles Mtfor Tom Bradley will be at the
Orange County Medical Association Friday to address
Orange County Women.Lawyers. "Women in the ·
Future of California" will be his topic at 12:45 following
the I 1:30a.m.socialho'urandluncheon. Reservations
may be made by calling 979-2362.
(%) CHARl.ES OHAMPUH TAU<S wrTH Novel'• plot anfoldtna
---• w.TMl..'t~
• I '"'°' oou.a
Stacy Keach. Stefanie Powera and Lee Remick •tar u arUat Julien
Mlatral, a model wlao l.Depl.re9 la& ftnt ~t IAlCC... and a rich
American woman wbo~lll9tral'•~enlaaanclladeteiiDliled
to becOme a put of bla llfe fn·Jadltla Krants • 0•1118tral'• Da~ter. ••
Tile mtm.erl.-contiDu.-at 9 o'clock toDICht on CB8. Cbamiel 2 .
•
A SC AP
saluted
BEVERLY HIUS (AP) - 0 r
nd AS AP h d a love feast nt the
Motion Picture Academy with mu i·
col stars and aw rd-winning sons·
writers saluti~ "one of the longest
collabOrations an entertainment htr
toa."
The musical program Frid y night
marked the 70th annivenary of the
American Society of Composers,
Authors and Publishers nd the SOth
year of musical awards by the
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences.
"Out of 143 0scal'5 for mu ical
achievement, ASCAP members have
woa 118," ASCAP Pre ident' Hal
David said as he cited the long
association between thc1wo groups.
David Jtimself won on Oscar in
1969 for his lyrics to Bun Bacharach's
music for 0 Raindrops Kee~ Fallin' on
my Head," in .. Butch Gasstd)"'llnd the
Sundance Kid:' .
Kathleen Collin•, Jennlf er LaVJane, h'ancla Donnelly 1n
.. .,,. Slater Elleen" at the Cmta Ilea Cl~c Playhoue.
Trivial Pursl;lit ready
for prime time show Oscar winnirtg ~ngwritcrs attend-
ing the program included Herb
Magidson, who co-wrote "The Con-
tinental.'' which won the first Oscar LOS ANGELES (AP) -The stars.
for best song in 1934, and -Irene catcgof') is Entertainment. Tile ques· Executi-.·e producer Ja) Redack
Cara, co-author of "Flashdance," the tion ii. what hot new board game is says it will be an entertainment hour
most recent winner of the best song coming to television? and not a game or quiz show. Besides
Osear. You. get another tum if you the' cameo and guest stars, he said
Bob Hope, Donald O'Connor, answefed "Trivial Pursuit." there will also be appearances by
Buddy Ebsen and Keith Carradine "An Hour of Trivial Pursuit," the mun>· other people, including
were amona those who performed on first of a series of prime time special~. astronauts and players from classic
the Samuel Goldwyn Theater stage. is being taped at NBC for 8rcsen-situation comedies of the past. He
Songwriters who also performed t.ation later on ABC. It has 4 taped descri~ it as a cross between
included such Oscar winner~ ai. star cameos and six in·person guest .. Laugh-In" and .. Monty P>thon."
Marvin Hamlisc:h ("The Way · We,-------------------'----------....... -~ Were"), Sammy Cahn ("Three Coins
in the Fountain"). Sammy Fain
("Love is a Many-Splendored
thin&") and Alan and Marilyn
Berpnan ("The Windmills of Your
Mind").
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY, llC.
f• The ... Of , ......
1922 HMta avo .. COSTA IEA -541-1151
u1r1~. ·
z_}PTBHll
~ ·-----NOVV PlAVINO -
DD UAMo\l'la ~
BUENA,AM
UAMollill 952-493
COSTA MESA Edwtr1ll Town Cenw
751-411M
NtWPORf 8f'.ACff
Edwards UOo
o7Hlt;O
ORANOE
ClnldOl1W
0.2553
WESTMINSTER
£dwln:b Cinema West
8511 ·3835
••ALL OF ME' IS A
SLAPSTICK, HIPSTER
HYBRID OF 'HMVEN CAN
WAIT AND TOOTSIE.'"
_._..,...., ft.OftLWAZIQ
STEVE LILY
MARTIN TOMLIN
AU<:JFME
COllAm» ,.,,..,.~
~JIQ1
COIUllUA ~Sol:Al!C'.Ol!I! PIMIM6-7T11
LAUIA .. U lo.m~
u~..,,.,.
!Ul!ltl
UMIM NK.fllNl:J'l,$Qowt
lel.Ql.ll ........
'°"'"' V•IM
~.,,.
--lftftl~~-11
COMPLETE
SP ATS
DAILY'
In the
DailJPllal
EVERY TUESDAY 2 AOUL TS FOR THE ,RICE OF 1 AT THE STADIU
WALK-INS* ~N1ll'U.Jru.rm"'i::f * DRIVE -INS m~
:!~~·I~~ Slflf'1[)fl[)I :icfc::i
113 ril4 •I e J11l I 6 J 114 2"1.!n~MC"f!, )
UNTIL ..... ~( SHOWS AT 12;15 2:05 3:55 5145 7 :40. t :40
Cllnl Eastwood
TtGHTAON (II\ Sllows It 12:35 21 S S120 7:50 .. 10:U
Prince In l'Ua.._. RAIN (a)
SHOWS AT U :4f" 3 :00 S:.20 7:45 10:01
Ste•• Martin AU.Ol'MlllN)
SHOWS AT 12100 2 100 4 100 •100 1 :00 lO:OO
8111 Murray Dan A111troyct
OH05T8USTKllS '"1 SHOWS AT 12121 }:4 S100 7:H t 1I0/ 70MM
INDllUtA JOMa • T1-T ....... Dee9 (N) Sllows It U :OO J t30 5 :00 7:30 .. 10:00 IN 70 MM
GllDIU .. (N) AT l 11S
.-10 D1wn (PO·U) at 1141
"l~ WOlilAN It 1£.D" '1illOUIS" (l'Q) I 00 ~lO HS
(PG·ll) "$TAI Tlla a Tl« UCH FOlt
11 JO UO • IS & 10, a oe 9 ~ SPOCI" <PS) 3 20. H~
"ll£D DlMf' ('6-13)
llDIUY mRl'.o IUD. U~ Ui 1~ lOIS
'1«lUSl l't M aJIC1U't"
(INUJClU 11 l ACMmD) 1~us •~•o1to11m
JTADIUm r;,
m lllllrll•'"' !Irr Std.,,.
Sten Martin I. 1..lly
Tomlin Al.LOI' ..
f"G) ~"' Co·l'NtYr• StxtHn C.nctlu (f'G)
HOUK8YTHIE
CUllET'EaY (a) ~111 Co-Feature
Mortuuy (It)
AllVUIQE OP TtC
NERDS (ll) Plus
Porky's <">
GaUIU•(N)
Aho Tiie LHI Sterfl111t•r (PG)
KAllATa KID (N)
Pt111 co-Hit Cloak .. D~H., (PO)
T .. WO'MAle t• aao (N-1a Also
Bacllelor Jar1y ("I
':'f\MI ... (l)
II CO.IY Stl.llO
IUO lto. S30. t-QO, It JO
!'IOUJO. (llO OIC»lll[t 11
-1 I( Alllllf£D) l 3\ UO
"Tll MTUUI." (PS)
100. 5 45 1030
• PA(IFIC DRIVE·IN THEAT~ES•
"AU Of 111." (Pi)
Pll15 ·smmCJr• .. ~>
MISSION '.~ ,_
, IN TERMISS!e~
-=~--
'Eileen' re rise en·
he ~ C1-. Pta ......... ,_ ...
produ uon of .. M)' ncr Etlttn 11 a
no talgu1 1np an more Yt'I) than one
The Joseph Field -Jerome
hodoro' mtdJ i $C1 m ba
menl p nment •n NciA York's
Orecnwich Village amt 1940 when
doors (C\en tn Ne" York) were lcfi
unlocked and hfc wan simpler, more
anooccn1 pr~ atton h's alio
nostala1c in thlt 1hc playhouse first
stage'(I u a doz.en ycan qo and it's
been one of the most requested for
rcpnse.
Director Pata Tambelhna's cutTent
rendmon lacks the bench strength of
her 1972 sta~ng. but n' 50hd and
en.1oyable at afs core -namely the
performances of the 1wo sisters from
Ohio who come to the big CJI) to seek
their fortunes
Kathleen Colhns in onl) her
second production, delivers a finely
etched comic performance a5 the
wnter sister whose physical channs
arc abundant except \\hen compared
to her stnkina blonde sibling. This
title role 1s bc'lutif ully antcrprcted l>>
Jrnntfer LaV1&ne \\1th the proper
combmataon of swcetn s and spice.
A C.htrpy \OICC lends a nice touch
T11
T111s~
without upptng her pcrformnncc1nto
dumb blonde parod>··
s thctr htft) landlord, F:mncss
Donnell} ts funny without bemg
overbcanng. and be ~• I) cl ts tO'
fortge an ethntc acecnt Lou Koso~
also imp~ as dJMS' old neW$-
papennan drawn to LaV1 ne"s
charms.
Michael V kneul mis~ 50me
good comic opponun1ucs 5 !thee •
footballernetghbor, wtuleJeR1eCow-
ley fills the: bill nicel) s bis hve·m
fianeec Bren Robtnson nd l>ougla
Hartman att somewhat bland a 1he
mce cuys who court the 1 ters~ Recd
Bo)ercontnbutcsa fineameo uhe
scrounJ) hand)man; Glona Jenson
Graham phes the olde t profi ion
with zest, and Robbie Schoonover
stirs things up v.ell as a prospectne
"V~tnam: A Television llistoJ1' w~ ~most-watched documenLuy series in the
history of public television.
But, many among Orange Countys Southeast AS1an community take ~ with
the series.··
: Tonight at 9:30 p.m., lbanb~Tnac Tran, ronner Vietnamese news corresponckut:
• General Nhut Van 'Iran, fonner Vietnam~ Army Gener.al; James Banerlan, au·
thor of LOsus Are Pirates: and Ro~rt Rice, formerly with the US. Stak
Department, Will air their concerns about the hi toricaJ validity of the
award·winning ~ries. ·
• NEWPORT BUCH •
OQIJSM l~l01
• 11.0 OOl.Bl _..~,
Ill~ S JO, I OQ 1000
#
J(HI ltlSIOll 1 .._." atMlt· <11 110 J HO no H\;
• SO COAST PLAZA •
9:30 P.PI. •
KOCE·lV, CHANNU 50
ALL SEATS $2.00 AT
mwARDS MESA, mwARDS WESTBROOK
• COSTA MCSA •
UM ARDS -· ......
)o&6 3111
HUBOt TWIH .,....
• '11 J~I
• CL TOflC' •
I
-, i • I
. .
' I • ,
l t t
COMPLETE NYSE C MPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, 87 •
Future factories
a far cry from the
activity ·of today
• By JOHN CVPlr'NIFF
,., ...... AMfJ9t
NEW YORK -Comments on
economic society sometimes stand so
strongly and clearly o,-i their own that
any el,borat1on ·would mer~ly
becloud the intent of the authors.
Such as the p<>rtrayal of the future
by Hany E. Figgie, chairman and
chief executive officer of Figgie
International. employer of more than
12,000 \\Orkers, and author of "The
Cost Reduction and Profit Improve-
ment Handbook."
_ .. A few years from now machines
that today arc tape controlled will be
voice controlled. They wiJI be tended
by robots who ultimately will have
vision. The only peOJ?le on the
manufacturina floor w11l be setup
personnel and service technicians.
"In the very near future, factories
w11l be . operated on a seven-day,
three-shift basis. while they will be
man ned onJy for one shift for five
days. The various machines will run
automatically and shut off when the
JOb 1s either completed or requires a
tooling change.
"The factory of the future probably
will be totally controlled by a micro-
processor. which will be capable not
only of rutl1ling the entire manufac-
turing operation automatically, but
also of f~rnishing an instant _ evalu-
ation of mventory. ..
"Instead of the bustle of human
activity within a huge industrial
comelex, there will be a few workers
weanng white coats, probably on
salary, who will calmly oversee the
operauon." ,
Consider this from Albert Sin-
dlinger, chairman of Sindlinger &
Co .. a consumer research and micro-
economic forecasting company that
makes more than a thousand tele-
phone calls each week to a random.
sample of Amencans.
-"In recent years, <>ur social
mores have changed, making what we
used to call 'shacking up' respectable
and accepted.
"Our surve}S now show that about
4 percent of all households -about
3.25 m1lhon nationwide -are made
up of unrelated and unmamed per-
.sons of the same or oppo llt" sex
sharing an apartment or house u a
household.
"In fact. they usually talk our
interviewers' ca~ off saying how
proud (it is) to be living together.'
"One·of the results of this is tha\
less is spent for housing and utilities
. than Y(Ould be if the two lived
scpa,ratel)'.
"On tht" other hanCcohabitation
has increased the diseretionary in-
come of those individuals. This is
because these households almost
always have two \ncomes.
"By sharmg living quarters, they
have more left over from their
incomes. And spent it on restaurants,
cars, video tape recorders and lots of
other goodies.
"And thas should dnve the more
conservative moralists among us
nuny. After all, by 'cobabitatina.'
both partners arc able to buy more
things and participate more in the
•good life' as they feel it."
And from Jack Lavery, MerrilJ
Lynch director of securittes and
economic research and Raymond
Stone. manaaer of financt.al econ-
omics, as this offering about factors
that might restrain l 98S inflation to
less than S percent.
-"Competitive pricing. During
pet'iodI of ristrtg demand, some finns
adopt non-competitive pricina l» haVlor, firms set prices as a mark-up
over productions costs because they
believe they can set raise prices
without a serious loss in sales.
"With deregulation and rereaula-
tion of many doemstic industries and
ibe globalization of U.S. markets. a
more competitive pricing environ-
ment has developed.
-"Labor costs. As productJon
levels rise, a major cost becomes
additional labor input. ln this cycle,
however, rising labor costs due to new
workers are providing a smaller push
to prices.
"Two-tier wage structures arc ap-
peanng \\lith 1ncreasina frequency an
union contracts. These reduce the
marglilal cost of labor since new
employees are hired at below the
exisung wage." . I
New chiefs at Disney
.,._...
Hotglasa -·.
A ten-~und melt of .. rare earth•' &tue la handled by a
worker at the Eubnan Kodak Company lD Rochester. N. Y.
The &lua la heated to 2.600 de&reee Parenhelt ln thla
funulce. As mant::!el0,000 camera lenaee can be cut fr~m
the &lua, whoee element la boric acid.
Wyle Laboratories, Shugart
agree on franchise agreement
The Electronics Marketing Group development.
of Wyle Laboratones In lnvne has Wyle Laboratones is one of the
announced a new franchise agree-nation's leading marketers of higb-
ment for all Wyle locations with technology electronic components
BURBANK, Calif. (AP) -WaJt as chairman and chief execuuve Shugart Corp. of Sunnyvale. and systems. The company as also a
Disney Productions, besieged by officer, Disney spokesman Ben Ches-The announcement was made in major supplier of research, engineer-
stock takeover attempts, a dwindling ter said. Irvine by Charles M. Clough, group mg and testing services to the aero-
movie market, and low attendance Eisner. long sought by the Disney president. who said that Shugart is the space~efense and energy industries.
and threatened strikes at its theme organization. was Paramount Pie-leading floppy and Winchester disk
parks, has added a new management tures Corp. president until Just 11 products manufacturer marketin$. its A1rCal tralllc I• ap
to its scenario. days ago. products theough electronic distnbu-AirC.al, of Ae°Wpon Beach, has
The Disney board of directors Wells. a vice president of Warner uon. reported that August traffic increased
announced Sunday 1t has chosen Bros. Inc., the motion picture The combination of Shugart's 16.3 percent over the similar period
Hollywood studio executives subsidiary of Warner Communica-strong sales force with Wyte's com-Jastyear,makinfitthebiagestmootb
Michael Eisner and Frank Wells to tions Inc .. will serve as president and puter systems marketing speciali sts 10 the carrier's history. Traffic totaled
run the companx. markmg the first chief operating officer for Disney. wall provide users in the Western 1 S4 million revenue ~sseoger miles
lime DlSney wdl be ovenecn by It was the first lime since its marketplace exceptionally strong de· compared to 132.4 million in 1983.
officers drawn from outside the founding in 1923 by the late Walt sign and sales services. AlrCal's boardings for August were
organization Disney and his brother, Roy 0 . Shugart expands Wyle's disk per-388,468 passengers. up IS percent
Mcet1nabehindcloseddoorsSatur-Disney. that Disney Producuoos has 1pherals offenng in important ways, over August 1983, and a new single
day, the 13-member Disney board not chosen someone from inside its added Jim Hunt, Wyle's vi~e prcs1-month boarding record. AirCal has
_u_na_n_i_m_o-'-u""-sl..:..y_p_i_ck..:..ed __ E_is_ner_t_o_sc_rv_e __ ranks __ as_c_hi_e_f e_x_cc_u_1_1v_e_o_ffi_1_ce_r_. ___ d_e_n_t-c_om;....:.p_u-'-te"""'r_.;...pr_od_u_cts __ m_ar_k_e_ll_n"""'g-. broken previous monthly board.JD&
records in 19 of the last 20 months.
and August's record boardings
rmtfked the third time this year that
AlrCal has broken its a11 time
monthly boarding record. A vaalablc
scat miles wtre up 24 percent over A~aust 1983, and load factor for the
month was 58.9 percent
PR contract •'6ned
Ernie Wilson, principal and co-
founder of Lanadon Wilson Mumper
Architects, has announced the selec-
tion of Amies &. Assoc1ates Advertis-
inJ and Public Relations as its agency
of record. LanJdOn Wilson Mumper has of-
fices m Newport Bcach_and Los
Angeles wtlh projects completed and
currently m progress totaling approx-
imately S2 billion.
Alr co11dltlo11lt11 pact •lliied
ZoeTrans Inc .. a subsidiary of Zoe
Products Irv:. of Irvine. has entered
into an agtttment with Air Inter-
national (one of the largest Australian
air conditioner manufacturers) for
the de ign and ~evelop~e~t of .a
unique compact a1r condit1on1ng untt
to be us.ed an Zoe-Reliant passenger
tation· wagons and panel vans im-
ported by zocirans to North Amen-
ca.
Bnti h Reliant had not previously
developed an air condittoning sy~
tcm. Co t to con umcrs is expected to
be ttndcr SSOO.
Centruy Club "111.ner
German and Eugenia Oi11.. owner..
of the Sir J')C('dy Pnntina Center on
S, Bn tot trcet, Costa Mesa, rtteivcd
recognition for winnina a .. Century
Club" award on Sept. 8 durin an
award blnquet at Sar S~y·s
Seventh Nation I Convention. Cus.-
tomer uppan to the bu 1n and
resident of their atta for the tr
Pttd> ha led to a les .. oJume in
J 98-4 which rank n among the top 2S
percent of the ir pecdy franctu
y tcm of over 4 0 ccntct1
..
. ..
Harding is new officer at
· Genstar Investment Corp.
Tom Hardla1 has been appointed &enior vice pre ident of the real t" tatc
"rvices division of Gen1tar lave1tmeet Servlce1 Corp. of Newpon Beach,
with rcspon ibility for real e tale manlliement, pro~rty management and
usets liquidations and workouts. Harding bas been with Brooclmoor Homet
and Ge111tar HoaslDC Parmen ince l 978. Before that, he "orked for Tbe
lrilae Co. and the Luk Co. He is a certified public accountant. • • • Pat Webster has joined B.J. Stewart Adverti11Dg ud Pabllc Rela u .
IDe. of Newport Beach as senior an di~tor, re~ponsible for all pha~ of
advertising artwork. and for a staff of des1gncn. illustrators and producuon
artists. Webster has been a fine arts instructor at Oru1e Coa1t Colle1e and
Wuklq\oa State Ulllvenlty, and formerly operated his own advertising
design snop in San Francisco. r . . . .....
Katlly Major has been named to the newly created post of marketing
manager for Muafactarbi' aad CoHultha& Services, I.De. of Irvine. Major,
who has operated a markeuna and management consulting fl!'"' of h~r own,
will manage the development of sales suppon and markellnJ poh~ for
MCS.MCS is a manufacturer and supplier of computcr-mdepcndent,
computer aided design and draftina and computer-aided manufacturing
software, turnkey systems and time bare services. • • • Ran Smltla of Costa Mesa is the new director of development for ABLE
Compater of Irvine: with responsibility for el\gineering development of new
prodticts and enhancement and maintenance of exisrio• products Smith has
been with ABLE Computer since J 976 and was appomted design services
manager in 1977. ABLE Computer designs and manufactures commuf\is:a-
ttons, general purpose and network products for host computer systems
manufactured by Digital EqaJpmeut Coro. . . ' Roa Good has joined Mkroveatue of Irvine as national corporate
acpounts manager, walh responsibility for. sales and marketi~g of the
company's real estate sof\ware. Good previously s,erved as tcmtory sales
manager for the southwestern region of Mclean, Va.-bascd Plamltn1 Researc~ Corp. .
• • •• . Doane Rickard bas been promoted to executive vice pres1det of lrvine-
based Security Paclflc Sta&e Bau, acqutred by Security PacUlc Corp. of Los
Angeles earlier this year. Rickard has been with Secarlty Pacific Natlow Bank
since 1965, most recently 5ervingas first vice president of the bank's California
financial services sales department. • • • Four congressmen have donated 3,000 in proceeds from a business
seminar to Cltlldren'• Hospital of Oru1e Couty. The four are Robert Badham
of Newport Beach, Wllllam E. D&DDemeyer off ulJerton, Dan Langro of4Jng
Beach and Ron Packard ofM1ss1on VieJo. • • • Valeria Graaat of Costa Mesa. an independent beauty consultant for
Mary ltayCosmeUcs, has completed three days of sales and product training in
Dallas during the company's 1984 national seminar. • • • Bernard Simon, O.D., of Costa Mesa attended the l 1th National Research
Symposium on Contact Lenses in San Francisco recently. More than l.OOOeye-
care professionals and ophthalmic_scicntists attended the conference,
sponsored by the Bau1cb &i Lomb professional products di vision. Simon
practices in the May Co. building at Soatla Coast Plaza. • • • Creative Endeavors of Costa Mesa bas added Pico Family Dental Care,
Scmslalne Dental, Comman.lty Deatal, Garden Grove American Deatal Cuter
and dentists Amie Flacel ud Jose BHtoa to its client list, with plans for
handling all of thear marketing and advertising needs. Creative Endeavors has
also added Cberyl Roa1ll to the staff as medical and pubUc relations director.
Roush was formerly with Providence Speed and Hearing. • • • Noel Joanna Inc. ~the NoJo label) has signed a hcense a~ment with
"The Last Elegant Bear 'to design a bedding ensemble and nursery aoccssories
for infants and toddlers. The hne will be introduced Oct. 1. .. The Last Elegant
Bear" is the title of a children's book by Deants ltyte. Noel Joanna isa national
manufacturer of infant soft goods and bedding. • • • Jou Garvey bas been promoted to a manager post for the Newport Beach
office of the international professional accounting firm of Peat Marwick.
Garvey, who works in the area of insurance.has been with Peat Marwick since
1979. She bas been a speaker for the American C:Ucer Society'• pilot Cancer
Awareness program. • • • • Tllree local members of tlle aato leul.DI bldutry llave completed tlae
1ecoacl la a aeries of fov aemlaar'I for tlle Certffled Ve~cle Lea1la1 Eucatlve
Procram, a.nder tlle aHplces of Ute NaUODal Veliele LeatlllC A11oclatloa.
They are: Beverly A. Batten of SUUace Aato Leaaill& m Huntington Beach;
W.C. Fox of Warrn Fox Leaslq in Costa Mesa: and Lily Lee of Guesll
Mau1emeat Corp. of Laguna Hills. • •• ROJ A. Ek1lriff lias t>C~cn~na~~mc~e(! VJ e prcsiden Of t>usiness na legal
affairs for nona Em.& Compater Software, lac. of Costa Mesa, a pubhsher and
distributor 9{.$00ware for business, education and home use. Ekstrand's
re ponsib1lities include participation &n nc.otiation and review of $0ftware
licensing and related contracts. He was.previously assistant patent counsel to
Mattel, lac. in Hawthorne. Ek.strand holds a bachelor's degree in electr'kal
engineering and has held posts as production and design engineer with several
companies as well.
• • • ,,...._. r Compatertied Sll~r, an Irvine-based real estate computer bank~rvace,
has merged with Maka-Mat.ell, a Santa Ana finn that matches buyer'$ and sellers
of products and services with the aid ofa computer. Clalre MUler, president of
Computeri1ed Shopped, will head the real estatcd1vi ion of Maka-Match. The
combined efforts of the two firms is intended to provide owners. developers
builders, brokers and users with a comouterized data bank.
' . ' . Brlan C. Wolf has joined the industrial property staff of the newly ope~
Anaheim office of 8Hlaes1 Properties Brolleraae Co. formerly o.. sclf-
cmploycd real estate broker, Wolf has been mvolved with property sales and
leasing since 1977, including employment with More11 aa41 Mllllcw of
Newport Beach. Jn addition to its new regional office 1n Anaheim. hPRC ha region~! oflf<'.CS 1n Newport Beach and l.a Jolla.
Wtrur E. NeGmlD, chairman and f re idcnt of Corcom Inc. o( Liberty~ille. lll .. ha been elected a dirt"ctor o TM HammM4 Co. of Newport
Beach. The Hammond Co. 1 a publicl)' held morigaae banking company.
Coroom supplieJ power hnc radio frcgeuncy anterfcrcncc filters to the
computer and dijilal clcaronic indu tn . • • • Jamu E. Camllkrl has been named vice pre 1dent or le1 for Dlcltal
Data<'Om, be. of Laauna Niguel. C.m1Uari was ~v1ously north~t l'Cgionll
Jes manaacr for Wlat y1&em1, a.c. and Will now spearhead DDl's nauonal mark.cu~ cffon for h Jactory manaacmcnt 1nfonn1t10n •Y tcm and
Workforce produet hnc. DOI ~alitcs in development, production and
mark:etin of: tcm for indu tnal application .
Rof mltll h1SJ01ncd Prt1ll .. HRae,l.c.of oSla Mesaaual manager.
\\ th pnmal') rcspon 1b1hty for outside I acqmnna nc account nd
maintain1naourrcnt ones m1th brings nine )'Cars of cxpenence in lhc pnnun
mdUSll") to ,has new JOb. ~or to 1hat. he was owner and operator of hi own
rcttaurant. Tiit Barb' Oall..,.ta. The Pnntma Hou • an indrpcndcllt dtvi ion
of C.*11 Eaterprtses, l1te., of'f'cn computcntcd typCscttlria and graphi
production oapab1lltt o II as tud10 and locntion photograph)
By JOY DEE ANTHONY .., .... c:en11,H•1 I
~c·rc Clearly cntcnng an mfor.
mauon age, ys Tom Nielsen, prcs1·
dernofthe Irvine Company. Of the 19
million jobs created in the U.S.
dunng the 70' , 15 mtlhon were not in
the manufactunna or.
This means \\e need basic reachng
and wnttna kills more Jhan ~vcr
before, Nielsen told a meet ins of the
World Trade Cc~ter of Orange Coun·
ty at the Wesun South Hotel Monday.
Unfortunately, Nielsen dded at
may be th t .. the gcnerauon ~du
ung from high school today 1 1be
fim &eneratton 1n Amcncn Justory to ar-duate Ids skilled than ns parents. ..
"Are we wttnessina the passing of
the Amencao drcamr he asked, citl~ the tradition of giving to one·s
Orange Coast College conduCting
how-to seminars for businesses
By JOY DEE ANTHONY
DllllJ Noe Cerftl• I RdMt
Many peopte have the idea and
ambition at takes to stan a ucccssful
small busmess. Few have the know
how. To remedy that deficiency,
Oranae Coast Collge, in oonjunction
with the U.S. Small Business Admin-
• istration, i offering a serie~ of 12
Saturday all-day .work hops. Th.e first
~orkshops was last Saturday.
In each acceterated seven-hour sc~sion (h.m. to 4 p.m.), panicipants
will learn the equivalent of an entire
OCC course, says Richard "Hart,
coordinator of the college's Small
Business Management Program.
The first day's lectures will cover
how to select a buisness site, how to
find an emerging business, and how
to run ft profitably. All motivated,
persons, regardless of whether they
even have decided upon the type of
business they are interested in or have
already tar&cted a field, are en-
couragcd to attend. educational program. Thi~ there
Another topic covered lasr Satur-should be follow-up by the franchisor
day was bow lo write a good business 1n analyzing performance. In the case
plan. Loeal contacts with those in· of McDonald's, this would involve
volved in businesses of a similar franchisor representatives coming_ in
nature will be provided for interested . and tasting the Big MaC$ or the Eg
participants. Hart feels this is one of McMuffins. ·Fourth, the hnchisor
the pnmary benefits of the 12-week should have a follow-up program for
prop-am. Many time! people 'with future products. If only one item is
business degrees have •ood theorcti· offered on an interminable basis, it is
cal knowledge of bus mess but they likely. Hart notes, that customers will
need contacts and practical help to get &f9W ti rid of the product and look
started. el~where.
Franchises, a topic to be covered ··From the perspective of the econ·
during the series, may be 8 good bet omy, when should a person get
for prospective entrepreneurs, Hart serious about starting a new business?
observes, because of the trainina and Hart says "Now is the time." We have product recognition that goes alona h' with the good franchises. Basically "the ighest per capita income in this
four clements arc important in select-history of the country," Hart points
ing one, Hart points out. First, it out. "There's buying power out there.
should be well-established. In other Retail sales are at record levels.''
words, if only three or four franchises The cost of each day's program is
have been sold so far, forget it. $25. To register for any one of the
Second, it must have a trainin& and scs ions, call 432-5880.
Irvine Co. to forin subsidiary
By KAREN E. KLEIN
Of IN D1111J ..... Stlllf
In a significant departure from
previous practice, the Irvine Co. has
. approved formation of a wholly-
owned subsidiary company to plan,
develop, build and own mdustrial,
research and hi~·tecbnology build-.
ina pro1ects. ' Formation of this
subsidiary signals a major change in
the Irvine Co.'s approach to the
·utilization of our industrial land
resources," said Tom Nielsen, Irvine
Co. president.
The company m the past has
prepared its industrial land for sale
and let other companies build on it, •
Nielsen said. But the new subsidiary
company, to bC CilJCd the Irvine
Industrial, Research and Develop-
ment C.o., will undertake its own
industnal building programs, work·
ing with joint venture panncrs
toward long-term ownership, be said.
The new company will be beaded
by Richard G. Sim, who has served
ttni!C vcars as vice president of the
Richard G. SJm
Irvine C.o's Community Develop-
ment Division. In that post. he was
responsible for the design, develop-
ment and marketing of the .finn's
residential communities.
The new company will focus on the
development and markctin& of the
2,900-acre Irvine Spectrum bigb-tecb
complexes, near the intersection of
the Santa Ana and San Diego free-
war,s in cast Irvine, Sim said.
• Our marketing studies indicate
th.at Orange County's industrial base
will expand by 8 million square feet
annually over the next five years,"
Sim said. "High technology and
bioscience research and development
are expected to be at the forefront.''
The new oompany will be modeled
after the Irvine Co.'s residential
buildina subsidiary, lrvinc Pacific,
Nielsen said. The Irvine Co, will
continue to sell land to other indus-
trial companies as well as enter into
joint venture development and build-
to-suit programs, be said.
Sim's successor as vice president of
the Irvine Co.'s Community De-
velopment D1vis1on will be C. Brad-
ley Olson, a scmor director in that
division. Nielsen said.
children the whcrew11hal to do bctt r
than lhe parent did According to the
Came&1e Counnl of Poh y tudees,
1elscn ad 1hc number o( fune-
uonal tlht rat i5 m the of 2S
m1lhon to ~ m1lhon. "About one
third ofour youth are 1ll~u1PJ>Cd 111--
eduoated, IU-employed to make their
way In Amencan 50Ctety "
The solution, Nielsen feels, ts to
build bl'idgcs between u mess and
education.
Twenty years a,go, the In1ne COm-
pany gave land for the U Irvine
campus. ''In recent years rm sonyto say, we have seemed to so -0ur
l)arate wa)'I," Nielsen &aid ... But
now I 1h1hk wc•re ~nl1ina IO
Orange Coat OAILY PILOTITUMd•Y Sep..,._, 26 ... •
redascover cach other "
To whaccanbed tothc UnavcrsatyofTc~ he adv&scd. I st
year, the un1vcn11y ~n_nounced the
endowment of32dWn. at a mtllton
dollars~ for1Ctenccandcoiaocer·
il)I. Th11 wu the lnNOf factor an the
ele ion of Austin. Teu a the te
of the MICl'O Elcctrona & mpuler
Technology C.0l'])Of'al1on.
Though Oranae County doesn't
have anything ·~u1tf so.arand" nght
now, N1el$Cn saad. bridges between
business anti ucauon arc bem1
built. UC lrvine, for exam.Pie. ba set
aside land for lbe Beckman Laser
Institute, to be s&.affed by UDIVenlt)'
students and . Donon for tbc
prOJ«t anchtde Dr Arnold ltdD\la,
Smith KJ DC Beckmaft and the Irv ac
Company~
In addiUOD IOll Re.Rards A ~t Compuy n devdop-:
lQll buddUll DCXl to C I Con. Of'
Medicine This will be lhe IWW beadquaners for elson aad IM
future home of UCh ~
depanmenta S>f psydal&try and ~
~.Y· . Add1tionally, the lmne Compa
1s now con11dcn~ the fonnadoti a
foundadon to raase money for belle biomed.icaJ raeardl ... Bio1eebnoloaY
11 the wave of lbe fUturc."' Nidten
said. ••abd we're on the cutUn& edee
here ID Onutie County."
TWO GREAT SOLUTIOIS
WITH ONE THING IN COMMON. AT&T •
The AT&T MERLIN"' Communications System
Small busines.-;es who want the right phon ystem choose the
Merlin system from AT&T. It' a telephone, an intercom, a
conference caller and has doze~'\ of advanced f eatlll'es you can
select to give your company a better way of doing busin R.
Whatever your n ds, the'Merlin y. tern will grow right
along \\ith your busin
Th products are available-at th follO\\ing to •
For the locati n n are you, call l-8)().247-)212.
' " -· . -. -,.....,. t • I ... I I)"" ~I I ~' ~mput1rl.Mcl t
..
CDMPUBHDP . 55°lj~~M
GROUP SEARS • ..,.,
•
\
..
TtalM
-
-·-
• •
ATllT
r
°""le C09llf DAIL v ptLOT nu.cs.y Stlptember'25 19U
ules for IRAs chan ed
RAllH • Scorr
income" m <'alculating how inu~h
they can putTnto an lRA. ·
Under pnor la"· up to $100.000 in
an IRA or othi-r retirrment plan \\8~
excludablc from an estate for
purposes of calculating estate tax. The
new bill eliminates this exclusion
aflcr 19 4, a pro,, ion that wdl be
i,gnificant only for c ta'tc.\ large
enough to be ubject to the estate tax
Ralph Scou 1s a certified public
ccount practicit11 in Newport Beach.
Orange Bakery ce~ebrates anniversary
Orange Baker). producer of frozen
and baked puff pastric , is celebrating
its Sth )Car in bus1ncs in Orai;age
County.
As a wa) of sa)ing thank you to
their customers. Torahiko Ha)ashi,
New subsidiary formed
MSl Data Corporation and MSl
Data Australia Pty. Limited, has
announced a re-alignment of market-
ing and distribution responsibilities
in Australia.
The Costa Mesa-based manufac-
turer of hand-held data terminals has
formed a new subsidiary in Australia,
MSl Australia Pty. Limited. to di,..
tribute, market. and service its prod-
ucts.
UPs AND DowNs
h-
~/tS AND ~WNl NEW YO I( (APJ -~ ol~wino ll•t $hOW• .tht vtr·t t · ounltr stocks and warrants tri.t havt oone up
•
president ot Rheon Automatic Ma· • line is unique 10 that st produce.s
chinery Co. of Ut.5unomiya, Japan. con 1stent high quality products and
and parent company of · Orange it .saves labor. Onl)' one person is
Bake~•nd company vice president required to run it, with abou1 four
Makoto Nakapwa recently hosted an add1t1onal people managing the fin·
open house markina the anniversar)'. ishing part of the operauon A
Over 200 people took a tour of the traditional production line would
facilities and viewed the production require 20 or more people Orange
li ne, which is enclosed behind glass Bakery's growth is noted by the need
windows for anitary reasons. for a new facility in El Toro which will
Guests were able to see the Rheon open later this year. The new plant
MM equipment which is capable of will produce special aourmet prod·
producing UJ? n> P.000 croissants per ucts $uch as special ba&ueue Rrench
hour and which produ~ exact pittes bread. hors d'oeuvre , European
of puff pamies which can be made specialty items. and filled croissants.
into many delicious recipes by Orange Bakery currently supplie~
creative chef • uch as strudels. tum-in-store bakeries and food scrvtce
overs, fish bells and beef Wellington. establishments, including hotels and .
According to Phil OeAngelo, di rec-restaurants. The popularity and
tor of sales an<l marketing, the Rheon quality of their products is known
machinery _used on the production nationwide.
1l MutOll ~ '~ t~ l7.#
1J ~krGkl -~~ 1~ ~~~ $ '• a, 2.,., 2-4\.'J -:I.II 10 f E tht most and down the most bued on 15 AMonlt ,, -lg -~ I
percent of change for Mondal: lf ~s~t j~ ~ -~ t: No s.curllles tradlno ~w 2 or 1000 I ct t ~ -'a.. lhares .,. Included. ' AdNMR 2~ 14 -!h 1 . M•t and percent•~• chaner:. ari, !he 1 ~ti 1l~ --11. 1 .
gj °''I"'° befWffO ho "'t" °"' C • "" i V~ .,., -h 1 . d pr ct and ~•,rss last Id price. ~ndl tun 1 . ~ -~ l. 7 ~ ~ -:w
j Name Last C~ Pct. ndtrn J~ ~ -1 I . ~~~~wt j v. ... H: I' l b~ ~ -~
t :i VJ -111. WP h J '1• Up . Warn I 2 ... 934 -n. l ~"'° r Up j 2 lrl' _ ... Skv ~. '12 Up l . DOWNS 1 l\ -2 1t1 N un 'h ~ Up . Na '1Jt. _c~. -"• ~Ph s 'h 'h UP J'·' 1 ~l~me ,,,. 'n li.l •fir 4 ~ Up r J A rm ~ -2'.4 n:: t: VanS k 1 o . Kou JYI -'h 10 AdVTel •• • 'h Hp I 3 ' Advc..n 1• -, .. h
an
Clearln.r stock · Orange co&at •hoppen are taking ad•an-
taee of a clearance •le at Relnert8 Depart·
ment Store, 1816 Newport Bl•d,. Jact and
P~ Reinen. plan to :retire after 35 yean
of operat!q the atore and that retirement
Will beCln u MOD u they clear the
-
OV ER THE COUNTER ·._ ---~
--
MU TUAL FUNDS
L ----------
mercb.andlae at their atoie. Thia week
Relnerta Mid he thoqbt the l&le would
clear the 1bel•e9 ln lila etore In a .. coaple of
weeb." He added the turnout bu been .ood.
one . '
Open your count today. Call the toll-free Financial Line now: 1"'8~272-9000.
90 DAY TERM 6 MONTH TERM
IZ.ZS" 11.&I lZ.&5" 11.11"
Curr n1 Yifold• Cwrtnt R11~ Cutrtftta.
• . ; )
,.
•
W H~T A ~HX DID
- - -NEW Ya.tK (AP) S.. 2S ..... '1
12
Golo Quons
I M ET~LS Quons
------
) .
That's an aptd scrtption of both business · nd
business p ople alo11 the Orange Coast. To keep track of
wherecompanie ar 0111gand hiehp ~pl ar h lplng
them t h r .ju t 1a h 'Cr dit Line· -ev ry d in th
u in s ctionof ourn w llilJ
•
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GARFIELD
MOLP t1 RIGHT 'fMERE.
l· Al.WAY~ WAN1 fO R£.M£M9EP. YOU LIKE. TMt!>
'
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bil Keane
. .
BIGG~ORGE
by Jim Davis
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
"That was the pencil sharpener for heaven's
sake, not the can openeh" "I'm no longer putting things off until
tomorrow. I've decided to goof off today!"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DEN IS THE ME ACE
"You know the rules ... you're not allowed to
bring your friends Into the house!"
MOON MULLINS
MONT .. it> MoNTH RECfSS·ITATION -· SMART BoY-·
fDUC,ATION
M.Al<ES THE
WORL-DGo
1~1, 1<,AYo·
HoW1S
SCHOO/..
?
PEA. UTS
OOR MOMEWORK
A5516NMENT IS TO
PESCRISE A SUNSET
• TUMBLEWEEDS
f?OuND.
~--
o __ ,_.,_.,. •-1s
Hank Ketcham
i<;:""~ ., 15 ~
t
)
by Ferd & Tom Johnson .
by Charles M. Schulz
MAK£.S VOV APPRECIATE
'™E 8EAU1Y OF TME
WRITTfN WOflo, DOESN'T IT?
by Tom K. Ryan
tAl48
~AQ8
0 AlOZ
••12
WEST EAST
• Q 815 + K 10 8 I
I::> v.w I::> 10974
OJlll 071
•KJ1095 •Q84
SOUTH .,
c:.> kJ851Z
0 kQt•
•AT
The bidding:
S..~ Wttt NortJa Eaet
l t' Pau 1 + P ... a o ,... a 1:::> p.,.
,. p.., 4 0 PUI
41::::> P ... ,. p..,
4NT p.,. 5 + Pau
,5NT Pue 0 • ·Pua
I c:.> p.., Pan • Obie
Pua PaH Pa"
Openlnf lead: Five of •.
SHOE
.
Bill Root of Boca Raton, t la., ll
acknowl dged u the rountry'• most
aucce11ful brld teacher. Jf you
don't beli v u1, take a Royal
Vlkln1 Sea M dit.eiranean Win
Country c:rulle tblJ com.Ing May and
e for you11elf how he e<>nduct~ a
brldre courte.
At tht recent Summer North
American Champlonaliip1, Root and
hi1 partner, Richard Pavlicek of Ft.
Lauderdale. bfd well to reach alam
on thla hand. Note that Root didn't
rebid heartt Immediately -he
ehowed hla good four-card minor
thstead. After North jumped In
beattl, Root made a move toward
alam by cue·bldding hi1 ace of club .
He 1lgned off after hla partner'•
cUamond cue-bid, but then launched
into Blackwood when North took a
aeeond cue-bid over ~me. East's
leaC!·directinc double was based on
the fact he felt his trump holding
would prove troublesome.
Wut dul1 led a 1pade, 1
declarer'• only problem w11 bl
fourth diamond. However, thl1 wa
a hand thJ Root mlr1it t1uily llav
us d ln on of bla dut a, and h
made !AO m~take. J
Firtt, he won the...pade openln1
and cubed t e ace of trump1. The
break both red him not th
1ll1htat, but l 'Wat revealinJ. Nex
came ice of clu 1 and another. Wett
woo and f oreed declarer with a
spade. Root croued to the table
with the queen of trumps and ruffed
a club. By now he knew Eut bad
started with four heart.a and three
club1abd.1lnce ht d doubleCf for a
1pade lead, 10me length In that 1uit.
Therefore, he bad to be ••ort In
diamondl.
Fw ...... uo. allle.n cwa.. Gen•'• ....... u.u ,.,. .......
pla7en. wrtt.-Gore• Bf'Mp WU.r,
1909 Clav•la1M A ., Pahayra.
N .J. 080'17.
BRABBLE by Kevin Fagan
1~ 'f"E. l!Wm,~i~IC.K . MR~. "U.R"1, l
WI\!> If ~'? CAt-lNOT \e.u, ~ L.IE •..
.
FOR BE'ITER OR FOR WORSE
Ui.zte. RN'\ CJ.CANED
UPOURW~
RcOMS,MOM .
Wf\NNR SE.e.?
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
DR.SMOCK
;t.
"f'HINK so, eu,..
CARVING
"f'He
AN-r1...e"s •MIGH'T" ee
1"H f! HA" r::> PAR-r/
HOSE IS ROSE
SO TMAT'S \'MAT DR. SA>CK 5'WS ...
I DGEPARKER
...
7
by Lynn Johnston
··· I SORTF\ t\RD
PR1oe.1N11-\E.:
(f UNK RNO CWTtt:.R
by Tom Batluk
MA~ING rr 1ME FIF'TEEN'TM 11ME. ~ HEARD -rnA'r~fQ
EVENING!
~ .
MEANWHILE
WEUL.WHICH CAA SHOUUO
by George Lemont
by Harold Le Doux
we euv. ,--'"' ~vt!V? -.-
)
•ft•r Chicago
wla,a L Eaat. C2!-
A two-team race?
Bal llcRae alldee In aafely to 8COre u
Aneela catcher Bob BOOne watcbee the ball
.,...,.....
aet away. It wu part of the Royata• 4..0 win,
prior to 12-4 Dljhtcap .tctoty for a •wees>·
Angels virtually
eliminated ail.er
dro plngtwln bill
KAN ASCln',Mo.(AP)-lfthc
An4CIS fall to beat Kansas aty
tonight, says RoyatS' third baseman
George Bren. they .. can start making
plallJ for a barbecue on Sunday."'
ln other words. it may no Ion r be
a three-team race in the Amencan
• League WcsL ·
uamblinf on 8 pair of rookie
pitchers wnh lo ina records. the
Royals swept a doubleheader Mon-
day ni~t to hove the Angels to the
edge of atinction -3'h games
behind with six to play.
Minnesota. which beat the Chicago
White Sox,8-4 Monday ni&ht. sits a
half-game bchini:t the Royafs with six
games remaining in baseball's only
tigh.t divi~ion. race. The Royals play
two more with the Angels before
closina out the regular season with
three at Oakland.
.. We can't afford to lose another
game," $lid a despondent Reggie
Jackson, who was l-for-7 on the
night ... We're in a position of having
to do something we haven't done all
year -win ix games in a row ...
Twcnty·)ear-old Bret Saberhaged
tossed a three-hit shutout in the
o~ncr, notchina a 4-0 victory. In the
nidffuip, 22-year-old Danny Jackson
held the Angels to seven hits through
seven inninJtS and aot a two-run
TheWll4, Wild Wat
double and a "srand lam homer from
Darryl Motley in a 12-4 trouncina of
thcAn~ls. The Angel clubhouse was quiet as a
tomb. .. You work every day since Febru-
ary and you have your hoPCS and
expectations," said Angtls M~
John McNamara. "Then in a crucial
dau~ lose tv.o. It isn't much fun ... hagen, wbo has be.en in and
out of the rotation all year. strUCt out
a career·hidl six and allowed only
three ha.nnkss singles. Jackson, 2-6,
who spent part of the $C850n in the
minors, won bis fim major league
game as a starter. .... m very, very eieascd, but it
doem 't surprise me, Royals Man· IF. Dick Howser said of. his young
pitcben. 11tey've both been pitcbina
eood Tbey•ve both beeft ••
prc$SlVC. ..
In bcbon~s sh losaes, the ROJ*
had aoored one run three lima Ud
two run• twice.
••Jacbon should have woo bil ...
four &tartS, but be ooly woa oet:JC. • d Howser ... I've been waldnl
these CUY5 pitdl and J knew •t..,
could do. ~ou QCVet know ......_
(Pleue ... AllOa.8/CSt
·Viola gets
18th win
or Twins
Hrbek's homer
kee.Ps Minnesota
in the hunt
CHICAGO (AP) -Frank Viola
• oed bis 18th pildlina victory and ~t Hr1>ct bit a three-nm bomer IO
lead tbe Minnesota Twins to u M
uiumpb Monday night over tbe
Ch' White Sox. v: 18-12, allowed .
struck out thn:e ud -in I
2·3 in.ninp. After Scott f.leu:bd'I
run-ta>rina sinak. Rick Lysander got
the final out for bis fifth save.
lbe Twins apcncdJbc ~ =in,__..;..i
the fifth in.nina off Floyd Banni11.er,
Raiders: .th~y justgetit.dQ.ne 13-l 0, when Gary Gaetti wa1trd and
ICOrcd OD Dave Mc:ia''s two-ou1
double. Minnesota erupted for teven rum
in the sixth. Kirby Puckett bunted
_ safely and Ron WashiD&ton reached
on a fielding error by tint bueman
Tom Paciorek. After Washi.ncton wu fc>rted OD a srounder by Mickey
Hatcher, Hrbek unloaded bis 27111
bomer into tbc kft field stands. Tom
Bnlnansky si~ Gactti doubled
him to UUrd. Tim Teufel walked and
Meier folloMd 'trith a two-nsn siJiCle
to chi.se Bannis1er. Meier took tee-
ood OD the throw from tbe outfield,
Tim LaQda lfCC1ed Gene Nelson
with mother two-run siqle.
Allen's fou~h touchdown is enough ·
to keep Super Bowl champs unbeate_n_
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
Raiders haven't looked like a Super
Bowl champion this season except in
one area -their 4-0 record.
The Raiders, who had to rally last
• week to beat Kansas City, pulled out ·
another one Monday night when
Marcus AJlen dove over from the 1-
yard line. his fourth touchdown of the
game, with 45 seconds left to give
them a 33-30 National Football
ta&ue victory over the San Diego
Chargers. It extended their Monday Ni~t Magic record to 21-2·1.
' Winning close games as Raiders
tradition," said maJigned but effec-
tive quarterback Jim Plunkett, who
directed the winning drive and com-
pleted 2• for 33 passes for 363 yards in
his best pme of the season. "It
doesn't matter who's wearing the
uniform. It's nice for us when the
defense doesn't play well and the
offense docs. That's how you get to the Super Bowl. ..
The defense didn't play that well,
allowing Earnest Jackson, a sccond-
year San Diego runnina back who
replaced the troubled Chuck Muncie
and the traded Pete Johnson, to run
for I SS yards on 29 carries. The
Chargers. t 0 points behind at one
point. also scored 20 straight paints.
JOcJudina J 7 in a span of3:21 early in
the fourth quarter to take a 3Q.201ead.
That rally was capped by Woodrow
Lowe's 32-yard return of a tipped
Plunkett pass for a touchdown.
quarter, butaS'lo~& as we continue to'
do so, I'U be happy."
San Diego Coach Don Coryell, who
charged on the field on the next-to-
last play of the game to complain that
the Raiders had 12 men on the field,
had no quarrel with his team's play.
.. I'm proud of the players. I thmk
they played hard,•• he said ... Obvious..
ly. we played against a very fine
football team. We just didn't win at. It
was one of those pmes where one
play here and one play. there made the
difference ...
The Chargers' record fell to 2-2.
Allen earlier scored on two other
short plunges and also caught a 30-
yard touchdown pass in the third
~uarter that gave the Raiders a short·
lived 20-10 lead that was overcome
quickly by San Dieio's J 7-point
spurt.
Lowe, beaten earlier on a touch-
down pass from Plunkett to Allen,
picked off a pass deflected by
Christensen and raoed down the
sideline into the end zone for the
score that pve San Diego, down
20-13 going into the fourth quarter, a
lQ.20 lead with I 0:2 1 left.
The Raiders came right back,
scoring /:·ust over two minutes later
when A len dove in from two yards
out at the end of a 53-yard, eight-play
drive. The drive was set up by Dokie
Williams' 44-yard kick.off return.
• . -,,, .......... "It's a win, it's a Monday night. rm
very pleased." said Raiders Coach
Tom Flores, clearly relieved at the
late.game heroics by his team. "We
don't plan to win them in the last
But the Raiders missed the extra
point when holder Marc Wilson
fumbled the snap.
It didn't matter, however.
Marcus Allen trlee to ellake off 8aD Dle&o
Cbaraer Ken Greene In Monday'• SS-SO
Raider Tictory. Allen .cored the winner
with 46 second.a rematnln& for fourth TD.
Sailor~' special weapon.: Ho Truong
N Ort ecei back. He caught ~sses for 13, 10 and "I'm not very fast. so ifs probabfy ewp r Ver S yards in the third quarter before he the patterns that I run. and my quick
(for coverage) and I'd get beat•·
g iti snatched one for seven yards from hands that help me." earns reco n on quarterback Shane Folcr for the Truonaadmitshcmayha"ehcl~ with 9 recenttons_-Sailors• first paydirt ~SSIOn in the "pick the team up" when he cau&ht :·'--~==:;;.:===:::.;~~==.:.==:--pcriod.~...__--...,...-~----.1.LW· fi.nL touchdo~ pass. ut._ Jus
Truong. at S-l 0, l 62 pounds.
played strictly cornerback last year.
and believes he'll never play football
a~in after l'his season.
By RICHARD DUNN
Nr"9tC..11111r•1Pt
Ho Truong sounds like the latest
international weapon.
And, indeed, Ho Truong i1 a
weaPS>Q -a human annament that's
used to 11tch footballs.
Truona. Newport Harbor High's
senior split end, aided the Sailors'
arsenal Friday ni~t by catchina a
Ota~ County high school season·
hi&h nine passes, and it seems head
coach Mike Giddings ~as perhaps the
most effective means of destroyina
enemy defenses in Truong.
The resources include an ability to
esca~ the opponents' comcrbacks
·and aafetics, somethina Truona did
Again,hcwasonthcpayoffcndofa second TD catch. the one that put
31-yard toss from Foley, cominajust Newport ahead. 21-t7. ''kind of made
seconds after the Oilers had fumbled us play harder. it helped make us
the cnsuina kickoff. It wu the first think win," he said.
"I never thouaht about. pla>ina
football anywhere cl after this one
(~ason)," he said . "I'm just pla}ing
here for fun . here in hiah school I
don't think I'm big cnouah to play at
any kind of c llctt."
play ·from ~rimmagc, as Truona And as far as rus dcfcn<1e is
helped operate Newport's comeback concerned, Truong said of his key with the timely instnJmcntal catche . defensive play on an Huntington ''I was kind of 'toked," Truon~said Beach pass: "I just happened to be in ··1 never V."IS tbink.ina about it,"
of hi~ most productive n1· ·"t or an the ri""t place iust like where I wa Truona continued, rcfcnina to the ... ... • r. ~me in which no rctti.ver in Oran-Oran~ County receiver. ··1 never suppo~ to be. ' 0~ thou 1 l could act that man yard ," And ho\\ about six tackles from the ounty ha topped ... I JUSt wanted to
Fo cy probably didn't. either. And comcrback po ition? "It'~ probably play naht. watch the ball and help the
he finished the nightcompletin&~ I of the most tackles I've had If\ a prnc. team out.
41 passcs for 233 yards. When you're playina comerback and "I was happ~Jhat I caught the
"I didn't know until the next daX you make a lot of tack! • that just touchdown p:wc but not the (total)
that I had caught that many pa"scs. • means they (runnina backs) broke yards and catches, b«au l didn't
Truona admitted. "The coaches and some pretty Ion• ones. ' -know I h d that many."
some playcn told me. then I looked tn "'Because my JOb is to think: about That is. of oou~ until he found
the paper. the pa • ifl didn't, lcouldn't get back crut. .....,,,__ Bo Truong
• apinst Huntington Beach Friday to
help his team ue the 01lcn, 24.24.
In fact, 'Truona totaled 121 yards for his rccrptions1 two for touch·
downs, both within 20 seconds of
each other.
Sea View: SaCldleback picked_ to win it
But it was also his fine play on
aefcnse that helped him cam the
D11ly Pilot's prep Player of the Weck,
brelk1na up a Pl and rccord1na stx
tack1es. .
The Hon, down 17..6 at the
1n&erm1 ion, rallied ror 18 third·
quarter points to take the lead bc.fon:
Hununa1on Bcach"s Ruu Moraan
mumed lhc cnsu na k1ckoff73 yard
lo set up the 1y1na touchdown
Bu'1 thank 10 Truong. Ncwpon
Harbor was able to make us come·
By ROGER CARI.SO °' ..............
They've waded thro\tih a three·
pme late acmna ready fOrSca View
L.eague football compeuuon and the
only ur'.J)rl ha been the rclatr"cly
Jo\\ star1 by the TroJan of Unavcr·
nyH•&h oo-'h•t they h vc hown through
the non-league campa gn here· ho\\
the Dally ~lot secs th race: • n Oct. 12 Ne ·pon Harbor nd
... ddlcback will collide at the nt
•
Id-card
..
auc.> rallied in tbe KYellth When
Harold Baines doUbled, went to 1hinl
on Carlton Fisk's 8yout and ICOl"Cl4
OD a ficldef'J c:hoicc. Kink, Qo bad
wtiked and moved to third oa tbe
ftdd"1 cboice and JC{JY Hairston's
StnlJe, scored oa a taCrifice Oy ~
'nch-hiucr Grea l:uzinSlti. Julio ~ fOUowfld with an RBI si.ftlle..
Hrbek said be tot a ~ lift u I.he
Comiskey Part ac:oreboard showed
tbc Chiclao' Cubs C%1ebratilll dlcir
National l.eaaue Ea.S1 titlo-dinchin&
victory at PinsbwJb.. ~what the Cubs were aoiftl tbrou&h OD . the field and in the
clubbowie kind of Jives you an extra
• incentive," Hrbek said. ··we coWd be
doiDf that in a week."
Said Twins Manqer Billy Gar·
dncr: .. Viola did a hcct of a job. He
pitched out ofajam in the first inniDI.
That's why be has 18 wins... -
' I
J
-Spar ha ada
ln the sun after
speci~ Dlilestone
From AP fllspatcbes
DETROlT -Oclrol\ Mana 1 Ill
rk.-y Anderson "ho b 5 witnessed
SC\ctal remarkable feats th• e son b) has
Tigers. champions · of the merican uaguc Ea t
Dtvision. ) s his latest acl·omplishmcnt wa \)\~ mo5t
satisfying yet. ·
Sunday.And rson became the firstmanaacrtowin
100 games an both the National and American lea,ue:.
as the .Tigers beat the New \ ork
Yankee • 4-1.
"I was back in my office, but
the players told me the fans were
calling for me," Ander~n said. "I
thought the) were kidding.
"That's the first cuna1n call
I've e\er had. I'd be lyina to say it
doesn't feel great."
Anderson's Cincinnati Reds
posted more than I 00 v1ctones
three · um es -102 in 1970 and
Anclenon 1976, and 108 in 1975.
"I wouldn't lid you, it's a special fcelina to be the
first,' he said, after the T1ge~ had raised their record to
100-55. "They might not want to, but the) have to put
>Our name in the books for this."
However. Anderson has a more important goal -
"The one 1 want is to win the World Sene an both
leagues," he \aid. '
Anderson 1s talung a team into the playoffs for the
sixth time. On four of the previous five .occasions. his
club won the uague Championship Series and reached
the World Senes, where he had winners with the Rech
in 1975 and 1976.
Quote of the day
John McKey, embattled coach of the Tampa Bay
Buccaneer., Uked If he could aurvtve when his dub was 0:2 tht. eeaon after pasting a 2-14 rec:ord In
1983: ''They let OeLorNn go free. 90 maybe there's
ho~forme."
Houk has everyone guessing
BOSTON -Manager Ralph Houk of ii
the Boston Red Sox kept everyone gu~ssmg
Monday on whether he will retire or return
to the American League club in 1985.
'Tit make a decision tomorrow," Houk said before
the Red SoA met the Toronto Blue Jays in the opener of
their final l 984 homestand
Houk, who turned 65 )Cars old last month, had
said he would not make a dec1s100 until he mel with
Haywood Sullivan, co-owner and chief operating
officer of the Red Sox.
Neither Houk nor Sullivan would say that they met
pnvately Monday However. they laughed and Joked
while chatting with v1s1tors m Houk's office .
.. Yes, I have been asked to return, but I won't make
a decision until I sit down with Sully (Sullivan),'' Houk
said before Sullivan visJted the clubhouse shortly.
before 4 p.m "I'll definitely make a decision before the
end of the season n.ext Sunday."
Tigers •weep paat Milwaukee
P1nch·h1Uer Ruly taab trok~ ta • two-run double to brcall an eighth-mmn
tic to lift the New York Mets o\Cr
Philadelphia 7.5 in National League
baseball aclion Monday, but it was a rather moot point
·as the Chicago Cubs clinched their first title in 39 ycan.
with a victo!'Y at Pittsburgh ... In other NL ction, Tim
Raines' one-out inglc drove in pinch-runner Mlpel
Oiloae from ~<:ond base in the bottom of the mnth
inning as Montreal broke a fhe-game losing streak by
defeating St Lou1~. 2-1 ... Greg Harris, Luls DeLeoo
and Craig Lefferts combined on a three-hitter and San
Diego pounded out 17 hits in beating San Francisco, 7-1
1n the first game of a doubleheader. Marlo Ramire&
cracked an RBI-single in the 11th inning, sending San
Diego to an 8-6....,ictory and a sweep.
. Arena feels it's been clipped
SAN DIEGO -Operators of the San m Diego Spons Arena, former home of 1he
Clippers professional basketball team. arc
appealing a court order to pay the Clappers
$576,000 in damages for fa1hng to properly maintain
the facility.
The Clippers, who moved to Los AnJeles m May,
won the judgment m June. when a San Diego Supenor
Court JUT)' upheld their contention that the Spons
Arena was not an adequate facility for a National
Basketball Association team.
"What it boils down to isl feel thejudgeerred in the
use of the term 'adequate,"' said arena attorney Larry
Patton, who filed the appeal with the 4th Distnct Court
of Appeal.
"I also feel the judge erred on how to compute
dam~gcs," he said. "I made a motion for a new trial at
the lime, but it was denied. I appealed from that
Judgment, after they denied us a new trial."
Phil Quinn, assistant general manager of the Sports
Arena. said, "We're going after them hot and heavy. To
show how senous we are about this, we had to issue a
cashierLs check forS865,-000, or wh:aTwu ti/• timfftlfe
amount of the award the Clippers received. We believe
the judgment was one-sided, and in putting up that kind
of money, we believe we can prove it and win in court.
Edison girls win
tennis match
Edison High's girls tennis team
defeated always-strong ~n Marino
High Monday as J uhe Slattery led the
way with a sweep in sin&les ma 13-5
non-league wm over the two-time
ClF 3-A champions.
It was Edison's eighth win this year
and 29th victory in its last 30
MtLWAlJKF.E -Milwaukee Bucks m center 8-0b l nier announ\.'Cd has retire-
ment Monday. cndina 1 I 4·year quest for
Nat1nnal Ba ketball A oc1 tion cham· pionship nng.
"I l~ked after last .YP.r 1f I could put up with the .
trnumatmng, t?oth ~y~acally and emotionally, in quest
of that all-elus1ve nng, a tearful Lanier id at a news
conference. "In look.ing back at my career J feel I ac~1eved a lot of goals most pc-0ple aspire co do. The one
thing that has been very elusive is' winning that
championship." • ·
Lanier 5COred 19,248 po1hti in his career ranking
12th on the all·time 1.ist, and grabbed 9,698 re~unds
The seeds for retirement, according to Lanier, were
planted last season dunng a conversation with Bucks
Coach Don Nelson. .
"l told him I never wanted him to have to come to
me ~d tel~ me~ 'Oobber, yOUJUSt can't do it anymore."'
Laruer said. 'l think as a player you lose that
perspective of contribucion.
"It really 1s a diftkult decision," he added. "I didn't
want to.~y in June that I was retuing ... and then the
competitive fire come out for me to try it one more time."
USC'• Bickett gains honor
USC lmebacker Duane Bickett and EE
Oregon quarterback Chris Miller have C II•
been named Pacific-10 Con fercnce foot.ball
Playen of the Week.
Bickett, a 6-S, 235-pound senior from Glendale,
led the Trojan defense in a 6-3 win over Arizona State at
Tempe. Bickett was credited with 14 tackles from his
outside linebacker position He also intercepted one
pass and broke up another.
Miller, a sophomore from Eugene, led the Ducks to
a 21-14 win over California, completing 12 of22 passes
for 197 yards and no mtercepttons. along with Qne touchdown.
The touchdown was a 31-yard stnke to flanker Lew
Barnes with 53 seconds remaining in the game.
Chicago players, fans go wil
after 39-year drought ends
•1tuted 1torv, .,. .. Cl.
Pll,-SDURGH (Al~)-"'The m tc number,t• yelled
JUbllanf Chicago Cubs Q tc.her Rick Sutchffc, "is zero, zero
Lero!"
A banner, one of doicns spe>ttcll Monday night in
Thre Rivers Stadium that thou nds of Chi o fans
helped tum into Wrigley F1eld·Eut, boa tcd "The maalc
number as 1984!"
Whatever the number, the Cubs ended a maa1cal,
Cinderella SCl\~on with a 4-,l victory over the Pinibu,P
Pirates that chnched the National 48Jue East cham-
pionship nd their first title. of. any
kind since 19 .. 5.
Jn a champagne-splattered loct-
er room afterwards. the Cub
cotJldn't wait co heap praise and pour
bttr on each other to celebrate a title
that.many m biscball thouah.t would
never come to a team that sull play
all-day baseball at home.
"They said a team that played in
the day couldn't win. Well, we
proved them wrong," idJ·ubilant
Manager Jim Frey. who di in one reen
season what a score ot prcdece&SOB couldn't do -bring a
title to ChitaJO. "This is JUSt unbeJieveable," said catcher Jody Davis.
"I've been here four years and we just got beat on a lot of
the time. The only thought I have now is that we're the
best. Is there any doubt now? What's the ma&ic number
now?"
Dallas Green, the general manager credited wilb
hfimg the Cubs from decades of mediocrity to a team that
Pirates Manager Chuck Tanner said, "is as good a team as
I've seen m the National League," was repeatedly doused
with champagne as he clasped hands and patted his players
on the back.
He said he has "good feelings" about the upcomina
playoffs.
"I thmk we've proven to Chicago that we can do the
job," Green said. "I'm tickled to death. We have a ways to
go yet but I'm confident we're foing to get the job done. I
have a lot of confidence and think we can go get San
Diego."
"This 1s why you go to spring tram int in February, this
is-the longest step;" said center fielder Bob Dernier,
acquired with left fielder Gary Matthews in a key late-
spring· deal. "This is step one, now we're ready for step
two," a reference to the NL playoffs against the San Diego
Padres that begin next weel.
The Cubs. who spent six months enjoying the cheers
of the 2 million-plus who jammed Wrialey Field. spent 15
minutes checrin~ their fans in a nearly deserted stadium 90
minutes afier the title was won.
NLlaaf~ 1914.
~ matches. Ol4~• Bolla.nd . Ba14wla
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SADDLEBACKPICKED TO WIN SEA VIEW •••
From Cl
attack into their game, which does
nothing but enhance the speed of
runnecs Earl Jones, Teddy Baker and
Glenrt Campbell. The Roadrunners
are thin in numbers, but so 1s their
No. 1 hurdle -Newport Harbor.
Odds: 2-1.
Z. Newport Barbor (Z-0-1) -
Coach Mike Gtddmgs' crew has been
impressive in racking up an unbeaten
record and showed it can go to the air
very effectively when needed. The
Sailors haven't really been at full
strength with Friu Howser sidelined
the past two games, but even without
him they're a good bet for a CJF
playoff benh. The league's biggest
team, it has eve~hing Saddleback
has except sprinters speed. Odds: 5-2.
3. Corona del Mar (Z·l) -The Sea
K.rngs arc precanous picks for third
place because of the nature of their
offense, which relies very heavily
behmd~uarterback Bobby Hatfield, a
scrambling type who is an obvious
targeL.Ne.vcrthelcss, combmro w.ll.b.
an always-tough defense, Coach Dave
Holland's crew gets the nod for third
place because of its reputation for a
fundamentally sound unit. and an
impressive secondary. Odds: 5-1.
•· UDiversity (1-!) -I. The
Trojans arc hoping their 21-0 victory
over Laguna Htlls is the start of
110methinJ big. because this is their
best look m several years. Coach Rick
FLORIDA ••• Prom cl
acrubbed off after two )'Mia," the
~ 'Quotid ltl IOUrCI U saylng, 'end eome were wtou
enough to werrMI en extre ~r. •'
"&MntlaJty, It J1 belleYed that
FIMlda wtlt '9Cefve • thr .. ynr
ptObatJon. At the end of two years,
he penattlet wll have been WYed '°' eome of the vtoiaUont," 1tatt writer Cr-'G BarMt wrote. "lndl¢a·
t1on1 .,.,. that at that time eome of
the aanctlona wtll be rela>ced."
Among the more aenou1 vlol-
at Ont ware tpyftlg on opponents.
OS*'lt!f:Jg ' lluth Jund contrOlled by p .. and the ..... ng of P'IY«•'
compQment11ry tlOketa
"The probation tt •kl to lndude
full .-:tk>nt -a NdUctk>n In
IChollrlhlpt, no bowt llPPNt·
8noll Ind no t~ eppeer-
n " the ~r added .
Witte l'fojl
Curtis is loaded in terms of retumina
starters, and this is another with a
sound defensive back&round. Among
University's credentials: Quar-
terback Andy Miller, runner Kalama
Gobara and receivers Brad Arnold
and Mark Favonte. Odds: 7-1.
5. Esta.Dela (1·1·1) -The Eagles
figure to provide as much excitement
a!i any behind quarterback Mike
Rosclltni (he's averaging 22 pass
attempts a game) and there 1s a solid
k.ackuiipme. but the runmn&...J3me
has not materialized yet. Coach Ed
Blanton's Eafles have had a history of
drivma quahty. oppos1t1on crazy re-
gardless of the final records. There arc
10 retumm& staner , includina Mike
Guyto, Dave Caballero and Adam
Walburger. Odds: 20-1 .
I. WOodbrtd1e ( 1-t) -Coach Gene
Noji's Warrio"' enter the Sea View
Lca1ue with a d1sappomUnll stan -
although they are probably the second
fastest team in the league. There is,
however, little in the way of size and
the passing game hasn't done much
(23 for 54 attempts and seven
interceptions in three aames, for an
average of 76 yards per start) to
enhance the runniegame. When the ruomog game is ri t. Marte Phillips
is the key. Odds: 2 -1.
'1. Lap.na Beacla O·Z) -There was
reason for optimism three weeks ago
with quality experience in many
directions, but Dennis Haryuq's
Artists, who lost their last eight pmes
in 1983, have scored JUSt two touch·
downs in three games despite the
presence of quarterback Jim
O'Donnell and a good runner in Mark
Draper. Laauna Beach is thin, but can
offer iood size up front, althouah
much 1s depleted because of two-way
necessity. Odds: 50-1.
8. Cott.a Mesa (t-!-1) -Veteran
coach Tom Baldwin has taken over
where a pr~m tias been in very
shaky condillon, and although the
Mus tangs are not considered cham·
pionship material, there's no ques.
tion they'll have to be reckoned with,
if a 0-0 standoff with Empire Leque
representative Los Alamitos is any ind1c~tion. Nevenheless. the Mus-
tangs arc thin, incxpenenccd,, small
and not too fast But don't try to St"ll it
to Lo!i AJ Odds: 100-1.
Dodgers,Reus~sharp
in 5= 1 win over Astros
..
/
. " . --Pro••~ toaraameat Profi ob&! lurftra Wlll com~e for a
S2.l.l000 punc at the tubb1 Pro intcmat1onal
aumna tournament today throu,&h Suncby at Occan11dt'a Harbor Beach.
80affa dJ~ J-.011• The Caty of Cotta M "ill offer scuba d1v1 les50ns tqlnn na Oct 19 at the Downtov.n Commun ty ~nttr PoOl I 60 Ana helm Blvd
TbcdauW1llbeheldon Thundayand Fnda) nllht1 Pcnons aacs 16-i60aan paruetpate Co$t
ofihe din 11SI00. The tournament b lhc final stop on the
1984-iS Allociauon of urfina Prcffi onaJ World Tour. For more mfonnauon phone 754-S300
The champion of the compruuon wiU pict up
$41000. All 48 ma n event urfcrs Mil ttetlvc
pnzcmon~.
For addnionaJ 1nformauon, phone (619) 4:M-3026
\
.
.
Skien BZpo '84
The ht'lt cn~or ska how of the )Car m Southern Cahfomi.a, .. kicrs' Elpo"'84," will
lake place Oct. 11·13 at the Los An,el~ Spons
MDI •
Toatb •oller_baU 9 layen aeeded The Balboa Bay Voltey6aU Oub is looking for
boys In &rades 6-.8 to become members. No expenencc is necessary, and the emphasis u on team plaf. and team discitiline.
The C\lent w1U pnmarily be pred tO the oducauon and improvement of beainnu'I,
mtermedllte and advan~ kien throup the
pcucntat1on of hour-Iona seminar programs of interest. .
Prac:tlcta v.ill be held on Sund&)" fr6m 10
a.m •12:301!.m. 10 the pli gym at Ne-..,,ort Harbor H School, 610 Irvine Ave.
Balboa y Volleyball Oub as the defending
Addttionally, there will be enicrtamment by the Rams cbttrtcaders. ·
Skim' Expo '14 boun arc from noon to9 p.m.
on lfbursdayt Oct. 11~ lOa.m.-9 p.m. on fncb)-:
and IOa.m.•:J p.m. Saturday. ' national champion in the 13-ud-undtrdivtsion for.1983 and '84. Theadm1111on priceofS3 pcradultand SI.SO
for children under 12 when accompanied b) an For more information, Phone Terry Sheward
• at 642·S286, • adult aHows a4miuioa all three days.
~obinSon an ry
with Ram&' p ·ay
Bad fundamentals
may be major key
to lack of success
A sputterinJ. offense showing ooJy
brief sians ofl1fe in the first four weeks
of the tea'°"· has Rams Coach Joffii Robinson .. more anarY now than at
anytime since we've been in this
slump."
q'he slump has had a puzzled Ram
coachina staff searehing for the flaw
:n its offensive scheme since the
National FootbalJ League season
began. ·
After watching the films of the
Rams' 24-14 victory over the Cincin-
nati Bengals Sunday which evened
the club's record to 2-2, Robinson
thinks he's found the answer to his
team's lack of production.
''Our problem is not our scheme,
whether we use two backs, one back,
six backs or the shotaun," said
Robinson at his weekly press gather·
ina Monday. ''It's in our execution of
fundamentals."
into the Western Division race that's
where it will come. That will be the
decid.i nJ .factor."
The Ram offense showed s.ians of
life against the Bcnpts, comina up
with their best game of the season, in
terms of total offense, by rollina up
341 total yards.
It also came up with the big play. In
the third quarter, fourth-year quar-
lerbaclc: Jeff Kefnl>, making his fint start in the NFL, threw a S2-yard
touchdown ~ss to rookie Ron
Brown. who made a twistina onc-
handed catch oo the play. The
touchdown pve the Rams a lead 14-7
lead they would not relinquish.
"The bi,& plays usually come after a
series of httle pla~a," said Robinson.
"We weren't making the little plays."
Robins0n is anarY that he's been
looking at so many different thinas
hopinf to find the answer to t6e
Rams problems.
"When you're in a slump, every-
body has an idea what's wrona."
Robinson said. "SOmetimes you can't
see what the real problem is.
"I'm more an&r)' now than at
anytime than anytune since we've
been in this slump. I should've seen it.
When you're losina. you ~n to look
for things that aren't there. '
ioed b)'
.
Senior .altball playen needed
Soft I players, SS and over att needed for Costa Mesa senior ~ms Cosu Mesa has two teams 1n the 23-tcam .
Oranie County uc. • The teams practtte t a.m each ~turday
mall•ood Park (c9f0.Cr of CO I and Cuaway) an Costa Mesa ·
For more mformataon, phone 9S7-2.S IS
' O.U 'Tree laone nebJ6 Discount tick.ct boob arc on lalc for the OU:
Tree Ran I iauon mecunaat nt.a Aruta
Patt. whidi be&im Oct ;)
. Tbc nta Ana tiektt otrd is open Crom 9
a..im ·Sp m Monday~ Friday Orden are
taken by ,mail and by pbone.
The uck:ct hooks otkt l 0 pcriJ admiU om
for S 17 .SO. a d1tc0unt of more CW\ :22 ,pm:cnl
over the individual pru:e pfS2.2S per tid:rt. For more mformauo phone(21.3) S74-639l
ANGELS •••
Prom Cl
aoioa to happen. Sure. 1 "'i:tcon-
c:erned. But l knew ~ the
ability to set the_job done.•
"Expenencc 11 nice.'' said desia
n.ated hiller Hal McRae, who au~
plied three biu a.ad drove in a run t
lhc o~ ... But ability is bC'tter. I
....sn't a bit worried about OW"
Pltchina to~t became I knew tiOili auysbavca .. "
A . i ac:bon happil ~ mit~h:f just pitched the t,.l'.., _....
pme of his life.
..h's the bigest pme of my life for
several reasons, .. he a.id. .. For one thioa. I needed to show l could do iL
And for another. the team needed
aood pme from me more than ever.'"
Jackson struck out three and-
111&lked three before ahi~ w&)' '°"
Mark Huismann in the ~th. no;
loterin the ~leap was Rick Steitcr
wtu;> 9.-U malrina his first·~
of the year. Anaels ace Geoff l.ah1l.j
1 l-l 0, took the foss in the opc:Dcr.
Motley '1uaed a ttr.-o-run doub~
help stake tbe "Jloyals U> an early
lll the nilbtcap, then blew the pine:
open with a Jn.I'd slam homer amid'
the six-run sixth.
Robinson said the Rams will have
to improve on their fundamentals if
they want to catch the Western
Divtsion-leadina San Francisco
49ers who have opened the season
with four victories without a defeat.
. "If this team is goina to 1et back
For the Rams. the highlight of the
game was Kemp, who was replacina
,reaular:startcr Vince Fei:rapmo, who
broke his hand the week before
apinst the Pitubur)h Steelers .
AJateD elr.lpper Jomi llc1'amara wun't IOiila down to a crucial doubleheacler )OM
,,....,....
to Kan .. • City wlttiOat a :f!Cllt. Bat be
couldn't win it acatnat amptn Dale Font.
"It's not over. But -..-e·ve Sot to wm
C'VCt)'1hias in siabt and·set t0me ~ from other people," said McNamara. "You saw whit bappCiled. OUr Pitfti ..
en couldll"t contain them.~
Payton needs
222yards
SEA TILE (AP) -Now that Walter Payton of the
Chicqo Bears bas passed Seattle's Franco Harris in the
race to break Jimmy Brown's National Football league
career rushina record, the question is: When will he do it?
If Payton, seeminaly at the top ofbis pme at 30 and in
his 10th NFL season, continues at his present averaae of
116 yards perie, he would vault past Brown's record of
12,312 Y~'-. , . 7 at Chicaao•s Soldier Field against the
New Orleans nts. .
The Sears. 3-1, entenain the 3-1 Dallas Cowboys next
Sunday.
It was a bittersweet Sundly for the running back
whose nickname 1s "Sweetness" at Seattle's KiDadome.
Payton won -but he aJso lost.
In a much-ballyhooed duel that fizzled, be easily
passed Harris to move into the No. 2 spot behind Brown.
But lbe Bears were thrashed 38-9 as Seattle turned a
brilliant defense and quarterback Dave Kriea's second-
half perfonnance into its third victory in four aames.
"I don't even know bow many yards I got today and I
don't care," Payton said. ·
"Jn Walter Payton," said Seattle Coach Chuck Knox,
"the fans really saw one of the .-me's arcat runnina backs.
He's worth the price of admiu1on fl\ by him~lf."
Payton outshined and outclassed the 34-ycar-old
Harris in only the second head~to--bead meetina of their
Iona careers. Payton carried 24 times for 116 yards, with a lonuain
of2S yards. Hams rushed 14 times for 23 yards with a Iona
~~ga.inofl1y.atd.s.~~~~~~-~~~~'-=~~-• Payton is only 22 l yards away from equaJlina Brown's
..
.. record. Harris needs 280 yards.
Harris, in his 13th NFL season. missed all of the
Pittsburah Steelers' tra.1n1na camp this year in a contract squa~le with the club he hblped to four Super Bowl
vactone . He was sianCd by the.Sca~awks after they _lost star
runninJ back Cun Warner with a season-end.ins knee
injury 1n their openina pme Sept. 3. Harris started the season with a 325-yard lead over
Payton but has struuled in his three aamcs with the
Scahaw He has pined only 82 yards on 38 carriei; a 2.2
ya.rd averaae per carrv .
WESTWOOD (AP)-A week ago,
UCLA football C()l('h l'crry Donahue
u d the word •·survive" when dia·
cu Ina h11 team's aamc with Ne-braska and, ash turned out, not all of
h11 playcn were able to. • Donahue said Monda)' that e1aht players injured 1n Saturday's 42·31o
to the Comhuskers are either defi·
natt1y out or are doubtful partiaJ)lnts
forth· s tutday'spmc I\ Colorado.
Out for at lttSt three to four ~ks
arc IU'On& ufety Joe Ga rand wide rteeivu XAtt Dom:U. ca h with a
shoulder para.don. Ga lff renlJurcd
the houldcr he onilnally hurt in fall ~ct1ce, and uracry may be rcqu1rtd
1f he inJurc It 1n. L:t tcd as .. dOubtful" or the olo-
Prep football players of the week
PAT McGRATH
Corona del Mar
The S-1 I, l6S-pound senior
outside linebacker recorded nine
uoaSSlsted tackles and three as~
sists. "He was just all over the
field." said Coach Dave Holland.
*---------~~--
SAM STROICB
Coetallea
In a 0-0 defensive battle with
Los Alamitos. he intercepted a
pass late in the pmc to nullify a
possible score. He ilso caught
four passes for 30 yufts.
•-~~~~~~----~
ADAM W ALBURGltR
Batancla
The 6-3, l 7S-pound ti&ht end cau~t five passes for 9f yards,
upp1na his season total to 12-199.
Also had six tackles and five
assists at defensive end.
*------~-~..;.....;-
MIKE McGLINCHltY
Ocean View
A 6-4. 225-pound senior with
all-league credentials as a Junior,
he caught six passes for 48 yards ana had a .. super l!lme.--~ora-----
1na to Coach Karl Gaytan .
*........;;.....~~~~~~~~
llARK DRAPER
Ld1i.Da Beach
"tnc 6-0. 180-pound tailback
sco~ the Artists' only touch-
down in a 7-6 win over Dana
Hills, pinina 133 yanu on 16 carries, two rccepuons for 20
yards.
pride 1t1d conftdencc were hun a
well, and Donahue said this \.\ctk
would be devoted to, ba icall>. !\tan·
1nao~er.
"I JUsl ha~e 10 tr) to act the team
back toacther, ~ the an wen to w'hat
our prol>lcms arc, .. DoMhuc said at ha.~ kly pttSS conftrenee. ··ane thma we·re not doina is
aciunatheball toour\\idcrccc en."
he continued. "We c.an't ct them
open We aren't atncratina an} kind
of'runnina ~me, and that' a prob-
lem. And It ~e been11\1n& upa lot of b" Pl•> dcfcn vcly, molt than an
the past."
The pa .o ad\"Cn1
..
GREG KOPE REK
ltdlaon
The senior corncrback· had
seven tackle , two of which were
touchdown savers catching the
runntt, four assists, broke up two
passes and had one interception. *----------
CARL BARRY
Fountain Valley
According to head coach Mike
Milner, .. he made some crucial
catches at some crucial times."
helping the Barons remain No. I
with five catches for 72 yards. ·----------. ADAM ANTOY AN
Marina
The S-9 , 200-pound running
back "ran for some important
first downs and kept us in the
game," according to Coach Dave
Thompson. He ran for 91 yards.
..L
RUSS MORGAN
Huntlnitoo Beach .
The S:JO, 16~pound senior "\..~as instrumental an helpi04 the --Oilers tic Ncwpon b)' retumina a
ktek fT 13 yank. tntcreeptina
pass and th~e rteeptions. ···-------------
MJB'.£ HBNIGAN
Irrine
Tllc ~nior cauaht sh pas~ for
76 ~11rd , and led the Wa} d~
fenm·el)' ~ith 10 tack.Jes and t~-0 assi~u. He kicked an e'<tra. point
and blocked very -ell.
TODD PEARLllA.l'f
UDi•enlty
The 6-0. -~OS-pound defensive
captain led the :rrojans to a
shutout ov.u La&una Hills at
inside linebacker with seven
tackles and four assists.
·---~----~~
MATT SEYMOUR
Woodbrlqe
The 6-1 , 180-pound had a
team-high 14 tackles coming
from his free safety position
qi.inst San Marcos. pining
honots i..·o straight v.'CCks..
·-----------~
CHRISGILL
Mater Del
The senior free safety bloclc.ed
the punt that indirectly won the
game. caused a fumble, knocked
• down a pass and bad five un-
. assisted tackles. savioa a TD. o *----------TED McMILLltN
Weatmln.ater
.\ 6-2 senior. he completed 12
of 24 pa sn for 197 yards and a
touchdo~n as the Lions had
---·--Senile. on.lh.c.mpcs_.bcfo.tt.fallin&_
on the pmc's last pla), 16-15. ·----------It ARL JONltS
Saddle back
The senior intercepted two pa,scs,. one setting up a Road-
runner touchdown in the second
quan.er. He also rushed for 60
) ards and scored a touchdo•n.
KanMtCflr Pct. Ga
• " ~ Aft9lb :a~ Oiakland ..s ' c ASS I SUtti. ·~ 10.,., 'fe11u .4)2 1•
z•o.tnllt _..,
Toront SW 1'"" leltlmor e Sl2 ti
IO&lon .m 11 ~Yorlt 532 II
Clltvet.nd • "2 ll ~.. AIO 37 -woo Cl loll tine.
MIMIY'1 SC....
Kanwa CflY •· 12, .,.... •c MIMtsota I, Ctlk'.Mo • e.ttlmore t·7, Nn V0t11. 1-6
T CWOfllO f, lot !Oft I
0.trolt 7, Mllwaullw ;>
Oakland 10. TllH 6 °""" Mmet ldl9duled TMrt'a o.nwt
"-"' CW1lt T4•11l el Kan&H Clly (GUblaa lO•lll, n
MIMnol• (8u1CMr 13 ,, ., Chicago
IS....,., 14•10), n • s..tti. IL.anoslOll ,,.,, a1 ci.. ... nci
( HealOll tO-IS), n ·
New Yol'll. leo.tev f-1) el a.ttmore IF~n ll·Ul, n
TCM"onto ISlltb l.S-7) at loalon (Nipper 10-6>. n
O.lrOll (O'NMI 1-0) at MllwaukM (Glbsool H) 11
O.kland lYovne •·•> er Tuat IHoueti 1'-m. n ·
W..._.Y'aOamn
.,_.,, •• 1<ansa1 cur. n
MlllMIOla et Cl'llceoo, n
S.llle el Cle<lelend, n
New York •t Baltimore, n
Tor!Wlto at Bolton, n Detroit et Mlwt41k .. , II
O.lliland at Texas, 11
Natltftll LM9Ue
WIST DIVWON W L •·Sen l)iego " .. A tltnte 71 71 101'1 12
ll 22"'1
2C
Houlton n 10
Dedlllt'S 76 11 Cll'dtlnatl '6 90
San Frencttc0 '5 '2
llAST DIY1S«>N
•-Chlcevo Hew Yen
SI. Louts
Pnlledelphla
MontrMI
Plttibunlh
,, "1
t7 70 11 7S
11 76
7S IO
71 u
.5H
.5S4 ' .51f 12
.514 12\'J AM 17'h
02 .22~
•·won dlvi1lon hllt
MM*Y'• SC.... ~ s. Houlton 1
Montr..i 2, SI Louis 1
N-VOr1l 7, Phlladtlclhle S
Chlcaoo C, Plttlbur9h 1
Sift Oltoo 7-t, San FrtndKO 1·6 Und
Nme 11 lnnlnet
Only ~ Kfleduled
TMltY's Gatnn
Houslon (Nlet~ lS-11) er DN191n. n St. Louis CLaPolnt 12·10) •I Montrffl
(Gulllc:kson 11·1), n ·
Ptln.dt!Phle (catlton 13·7) •I New YCW11
(Oarllne 12-1>. " Cl'l!Qeo (Ruthven S-IOl at Pfttlburo!I (Del.eon 6· 13), n
Allenla (Cimo 1·6) at Clnclnnell (ltol>-
lnson 1·2). n
San DleOO (Loltllr 11 ·12) at San Fran· clKO (l(f\Alow 10-12), n
W ...... Y'aGemes
Houstol\ at ~. n Ph~ et New YOt'k
San DleOO at San Frenclteo
St. Louis at Montreel, n
Chlceoo al Plttlbu<oh, n
Atlante et Clncllll\atl, n
AMERICAN LEAGUE It"* A, Anteb 0 FIAST GAMa
CALll'OtlNIA KANIAS QTY
81nlQUZ rt
Car_ lb
Lvnncf O.Cncs3b
OowniMlf ReJksn dll
Grlctl 2b
Soonec
..,.rronc
Sdloflldu
SCOIWtllh Plcclolo .,
T"*
nrllllf nrllbl
•010 WlllOllcf •021 •010 Uonesrt 3211
4000 artttlb 3000
•010 Prvor3b 0000
) 0 0 0 McRHdh • 1 3 1
3 0 0 0 MolltY If • 0 2 I 2 0 0 0 Balboni lb 2 0 0 O
2 0 0 0 W1than lb 1 0 0 0
0000 Wtlll12b 2110
2 0 0 0 Slawf\I c 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Cncocn u J 0 0 0
0000
2' 0 :t I T ..... sc.ere .,., ..... 27 4' 4
C1llfCM"nla 000 000 000-O
Kanws City 001 001 lhc-• Gatne Wlnnlno Rll -Wison (7).
DP-<.alifornll 1. Kanw~-Otv 1. LO&-Callfornll 4, 1(911AJ Cltv S 28-Whll•
Wiison, McRM, Moller HR-1....Jonft (1) ~uoht, White, Prvor
• H R IR H SO ~
Zahn L,12·10 6 7 3 3 1
Cortlefl 2 2 I I 0
KMUsCltv
S.brtlonW,10·10 9 3 0 0 1 6
Z.hn Pitched · lo 3 baller• In the 71h
HBP-Narron br S.blrhaCMlf'I Uonn bv
Con>ell. T-1.57
Rrtab 12, Anelli 4
SICOMO GAMa
CAUllOttNIA KANSAS C1TY
Pettis cf
lenlquz rt
RaJllsndll
OeCnaJb Thmas3b
Oownlnolf
Grich 2b DMllltr lb
WllfOftO 2b
Boonie Nerronc
Sdloflld ..
Sconlnllh
PlccioloH
Tetell
Mrlllll ebrllbl
3210 WlllOllcf •220
4 0 0 1 Roberta If 0 0 0 0
4 1 1 0 Stltrldn rt s 2 2 1
4030 Brell3b 3123
1000 Prvor3b 2 1 21
• 0 1 2 Ori• dtl 2 2 0 0
4 0 0 0 Motley If • 1 2 6
3100 LJonnlf 1000
1 0 0 0 a.lbonl lb • 0 2 0 ) 0 I 1 White lb 4 0 I 0
1000 Blendn2b 0000
2 0 1 0 Sleuotll c 3 2 2 0 1 O O O Wathen c 1 O o o
0 0 0 0 CntPCn H • I 1 I
U 4 I 4 T..... J7 12 1' 12
sare w ""*"' C.llfornll 001 100 101-4 Kansas CllY IOC 006 Olx-12
Game Wlnnlno RBI -Brett (9) E-Brell, Wiison. DP-C1lllornla 3
Loe-<:1t1fornle 9, Kan .. s City s 28-
DeCJnc.a, "•"· Mollev. SlauohlT C4ncec>• CIOn, Pellls HR-MolltY (IS), SMridan Ill
H-Wlhon 2 (46) SF-Benlewtz
c..-....
Strer L10·1
1(1'\lfrnsft
Cur11s
L..Saltchll
LaCort•
!ft H RIRHSO
2 2·3 6 s s 2 2
1 200-0J
I I 0 0 1 2
2·3 • • • 0 i
2 2·l 3 l 3 I 0
KaMe•Cltv
D.Jadl.to11 w.2-• 1 1 3 2 • s· Hulsmann 2 I 1 1 o 3
WP-HulMnenn T-2 41 A-3',S74
NATIONAL LEAGUE
DedeM'S 5, AltrM 1
HOUSTON LOS AtfGILU
Oor1n.2t1
Coblll)b Gerner)!>
Cruz If
land
Puhl rt
AlhbVt
C11trik1111 IACOUP
• llldlrdl""
Ca.floulllt T olr'l\eft !If\
SamOltOll T .....
nr11111 ••1r11111
4 0 1 0 Sax 2b ) 1 1 1
• 0 2 0 BRUUll " • 1 2 0 • 0 1 0 Lendrll rt 3 1 0 0
• 110 Mldndort 1000 ~010 Giwrerd , , , ,
l 0 1 0 MarlM If • 0 • 0
2001 Amlullell 0000
3 0 0 0 SCIOKll c 2 ~ 1 0
I I 1 0 8rMm lb J 0 I 0
1 O I O Rivera Jb J 1 'l O
0 0 0 0 lteu.a 11 2 0 0 0
1000 .,....,...°" 1010
0000 How 11 0000
11191 T.-JI St 4 SC... ..., Ouartwa
Houston 000 000 lOC>-1
Loa Al\9MI 003 llOO 20x~
GalN WIMlnt Rll -~"'"°ero Ill E-AtNw, CRrt!IOlla ~ IOI\ J, Lot ~ J L~IOft •, l.M A"'9ift 1
te-ttlvtrl l'fR-Oueirrero Cl•>
S.-.lvera (I), a......-(1) s-su SF-
AINW. ~ H RIR U IO
S 1 3 I 1
2 ' t 1 0 I 0 0 0 t
7 ' 1 1 0 2 o o ·o 1
Natfonat ~
BATTING ( S al be.II) G,..-vnn. San
OlelO, .ass. Lacr. Plllaouren • .317. co.vtt. San Fra!\CiSCO, 3l5; C.Oll, Ho\AIOf'I, 31f.
Sandber9, Chluoo, .31<• ••
RIJNS Sandbefo. Chicaoo, 111, S.muat.
Phlladlll>ftll, lOS, Wlooins, Sen o;fOO, 104,
"'"'· Mofltt'MI. m, 'Miii'"''· Chlceoo. 100
RBI Sdln!ldt. PNiedlCpN1, IOS. Carter,
MonlrNI, 103. Ctv, CtllcaOo. H: Ourt\am,
Chlceoo. 9S; Murphy, Attent•, 95
HITS GwvM. Sen Dleoo. 210 S.ndbll'o.
Chicaoo, Its, Samuel, ~. lU,
ltltiftll, MontrMI, 1 ... Cruz. HoWton, 179
DOUBLES'. Rah1el. MontrMI, 37; ltav. Plllibul'Oh, 3', .Samu.I, PNiNelPtl... 3$,
S.ndbenl. Oleaoo, M: Murphy, Attellle, 31.
TRIPLES· Saml*. Pfliladllphla, 19; S.l'ldbert, OllQeo, If, Cruz, HooilOll, ll,
Revnoldl. Houston, 11, Oofl'I, HoustOft, 11;
Wvnne, PUtsourwt'I, H
HOME RUNS· Scflmfclt, ~.JS,
MUrllhy. Atlante, ~: CllV, Chlceeo. 25;
Caner, Montrffl, 2s. Fosllt", N-York,
"· Strewt>errv. New Yori!, 23 STOLEN BASES· Raines, Monlroal, 7l; semue1. ~.. 6'; WIOolM. san
Oiello, "· VHeves. PfllledllPtlla, •• RMU$, Clndnllell, '7.
PITCHING m dlcblona>: Sutdifft, Oii•
ceoo. 16·1, 2.ff; Soto, Clnclnnall, 16·7, H2,
"9M, Dedlltl. 12·6, tA, R1wleY, Pllllt·
dllptlla, 11>-S. 363; GGoden. Hew York. lM,UO
STRIKEOUTS: Goocleft, N.W Yen, 276. v~. OMews. DI; ltvln, Houston.
1'7; Soto, Clllcinnetl, 170, Cer11on, PTllie<lef· phle, 1'3
SAVES Suttar, SI Louis, '3, LeStnllh, Chlcaoo. 33; Orosco, N.w Vorlt, 31;
Holland, PN~la. 2', Go5 .... , Sin oieoo. u.
NL East c:Mmokw\I
A list of the Nalloflel Luoue'• EHtern
Division dlemplom since the dMslonet
'"''''"' beffn In 1"9. • ,,.._....._York Mell
l'10-f>11tsbur9'\ Plrete&
lt71-P!ll$bur9'1 Plral• 1'12-Plll~ Plrel• l~w York Meta
1'7,_Plttl!lvroh Plretn
1'7~1ttltklroh Plrelts
1'1~• PhlU1ft 1'77-fllhlladeloftl• Pl'I 1'7t-PlllladelPHI Phllllas
1'79-PltlsburOh Pirates 19'0-PnllldllPhla PnllllM
19'1-Monlrffl Expos
lfn-51. Loul' C:atdlnals 1~ .. Phlllles
ltM-<hicaoo Cubs
BaMballlAYeffl
LEAGUE CH~'"tr SERIES
TUtsdtY, Oct. 2
Detroit al AL West 1n10111) San DiaOO at Chlcaoo Cubs (day)
-w...,...v,Oct.3
OelrOil at AL W•I (niOtll)
Saft Dleoo al Clllcaoo Cubs (day)
ThUndly, Oct ••
Chlc•oo Cubs et San Oleoo 1nlohl) ~y, Oct. s
AL w111 11 Oetroll lnt0hl)
Setur*r, Oct. ' AL Wtat at Detroit (day), if necau.trv
ChiQoo Cubs at Sen Oleoo (ntohll, rt
nteal$11'Y
Sundly, Oct. 7
AL Wnt at Detroit (nfOhl), H nect'"ry
Clllcaoo Cubt ti Sin Dleoo (daY), H
neotS .. rv
WORLD SEllt.IES
TUlldly, Oct. f
al Nationel (nloht) w.....-,,Oct. lD
et NallO<lll lnlohtl F1'11111cv, Oct. 12 .!! American (nlofll) . .Saturdly, Oct. u
"tel American (day)
·• $4Mdty, Oct. 14 at American (day), II nec.uarv
Tundly, Oct. U
at N1l IOtle.I (lllOfll), II neceuarv ._.....Y,Oct.1'
'' Neroonat lnlollt>. H nec:es .. rv RIYMd Wend l«t9a SdMdUle
(H cuen retftsonf Naltenll LAeeue>
TUllMlv, Oct. 9 et Amerleln (night)
W.....,.y,Oct.11
at Amerlc.tn (nlohl l
Fnay, Olt. 12
et Natlonal !dav) .
s.1vni19y I Ocf, 1)
at Natlonel (daY)
SUnlllly, Ott. 14
•' Natlc;,afldlv), If necnsarv T...-v,Od. U
al American (nlol'lt>, ff neeMSWV . w.-....,,ocs. ,.
al Al't\t(IQn (nltfll). If necassery
Watlrpelo
COMMUNITY COLLllGll Cllflfa Tl4H'Mfl'llftt
"'"' Rtuftd Oelcloll W"t 11, MMtate I ~slo 0 0 1 0-1
Golden WHI 3 4 2 2-11
GOldln West K.orlno -Gfuoer 4.
HalPlllde 1. ZakelJty 1, MurPhY 3, LIJM 1, Crow I.
.ttetl'ld R IVl'ICI G.i.n West 11, Calltlle 2
C.t>rlllo 0 0 2 0-2
GOIOafl WHI • 7 l ot-11 GOiden Wnl K«~ -H9rmsfad 4,
GrUber 2, COOlli 1, Zellesllv 2, Cr-2,
Lewin 1, Wlctca 1, aoe1n 1, Murt>nr 1,
SwMnev 1, ave 1, LUii<! 1
~ 0.... Wnt 12. Cues• J
GOldln Wesf 5 2 l 2-12
Cueste I 1 0 0-2
GOiden Wnt scorine-Crow 2, ZAlka.iir
2, Murptiv 2, COOlli 1, Gruber 1, Halllhlcl.t 1,
Wlc:k• 1, Booln 1, Lund l.
~ ~ Wiit 12, LMle laeO CC 11
LOft9 laatft t J J 1 1 1-11
GOiden Wnt 1 • ! 2 2 1-12 GoiOln Wiii IC«llll -H1lptc•cle 3. Grut>er 2, MurPhY 2, Luncl 2, Hermat1d 1, Wicks I, Crow 1, ... ~ ~ ... Cfl n. DMI t
score bV autrtwa ~ hectl 7 ) 4 ,...,,
01111 2 2 • 1-'
LISIUN h•cll tCOtlnt Hohn S, FtH«
3, Gltber1 J, GIWd 1
MINS TL AGUI
aDISON (t-1)
0 WHt t
" Colton ' ••Mint ~J 10\C.0 (el HI)
dbOll t11 OCC> HUlll ton e..tft t V (II H l
:t H1-Marlna
10 Nf-Ocittll View
SEA VIEW IAGUll
SADOIAIACK (i-0)
41 $ante Ant Yllltr
.. $ant.t ""-21 Le Habra S2~ta Mete let NHl
CM-Unlvtntfv (SA ~I
011-Hpl. HllttlOt (SA low!> O~I Notre Oeme
011-'Wntmlmttt COCC> 019-0cnll V (al H l
Qtt-iHfft., BQCh tat OCC l
N~ln V hv 11111 A) Ht-Mat na lat OCCl
14 Hunt ton lftcfl 1 o l COllOMA DmL MAit IJ-1 O...eltellda tet NH) e»t-Woodbrtdlll CSA towf)
HKCIM (•I NP!. Hart>Qt)
N.-.i lA9Ulll laOCl'I • •, Sane~ o Ca strano va .. Y ... 11
'OUNTAIN VALt.:aY t:t·O) ' 11 Mlt.r De! IJ
17 El Toro 14
2' Minton VletD lf
"9-5'f'vlt1 (SA Bowl)
06-t.8 ~r <at Wstr)
012"-«Mn Vie.-(el Watrl
Qlt-Marlne (at OCCl
oi.-Wntll\lftttw lat Hll
N1-E ClllOft ( B lt Al
"'-t Hur1t"'81on llffch
HUNTINGTON 8EACH. (1. 1-1)
10 Corona det MIAr 14
17 0.mltfl d 1' N9wPOtl HerDor 24
"9-U Wlbon
o.-Mattr Oej 111 OCCI
Ol~rlna
S»~o .. ac;h Oii NH)
Of-WOOcltlfldel Cet 1r11lnel
Oll-(;ol!a Mesa (II OCCI Olf-Ul'ltvwaltr (el NHI
076-Ealaftcie (II OC:C>
NJ-SeddltOaek lelNHI ,,. ..... , HewPorl HerOOt
C:OSTA MISA tO·Ml
• Boise Grendl 1 Santl190
0 LOI Alemll
S27-~ let NH)
05'-at Leo11111 9ftch 012-'CdM lat OCCl Ol~HPI. Harbor (It OCC) O~nlverlltv (al lrVlnll
N,_.WOOdbrldoe Ill OCC) ~st•llCll (II OCCI
uNtv .. mv H·i>
1 lfvlnl
0 Mllt!on v ltlo ! 1 Le9Ufta Hilb
Ut-est1ncla lat OCC:) 0.-SeddltMck ($A IOWI)
012-UO left. (al IMMI
Olf-CdM C•t NPI • .._,,_)
7 OH-Co•ta Mfte let trvlftt)
~ 1 N 1-Httl Hlr110r lat 1rYtnt l
0 Hf-,-Woodtlrldee (al lrVlnel
WOOOMIOOll (l·t) ,. L.eeuna Hiiia
1 TU\1111 o San Metec>•
Slt-11 ~ Hl(t)or
Os-<:CIM Cal trvlnel
012-tislande (al NH>
019--UO left. l•t lrvlnl)
Or~ HJlb (et MVJ
6 o 1 1 Dane Hiiia O 01.-Werr (II MVI
O 0,.....1 Mlnlo!I Vie
N!-el $en OlrrMnte "W9-CaPO V.U.Y lat MVI
•VtHI U·2l 21 Uftlvtt,lty
1 H9WllOl1 Hartior 1 Tu.tin S I 'Toro Ill MVl
Of-San Cttrnenl1
,, 012-at CaPO V•lltv
21 019-.at Dene HlllJ. o OU-Oehr N~.iotl Vltlo
.....UOUl\I Hiil
LAGUNA HILl.;S (O·i>
I WOOdbfldOt
1' E111ncl1
0 UnlvtnllY $2111 tNvfelr
Os-!EI 1i'ot0 lat MVI
1 01,.....t Mission Vlt
21 01""1 San Clemtnl• lf 02H<aPO Valley (al MV)
N>-'Oena Hlh Ct! MV) ,....._,Irvine
MISSIOff V.JO (2.1) •
1
IO ti
16
17
21
6 01,._I Westmil'ater
025-Edlaon <•t OCC> N~1111Vlew
N9-Fln VllltY (II HBI
&STANCtA (1°1•1) I OcNn Vllw
17 Leoun1 Hitt• 21 'Sen Clemente S2t-Unfv.,.ity (II OCC)
OS-.! NewPOrt Harbor • 012-Wood:N1doe lei NH)
21 076-S41ddl9baC._ (SA lowll
1• N~Olta Mesa l•I OC:CI H N~nlverslly <•t ltvlnol
21 Sen oi.oo Morse
21 un1,,ara1ty
19 FOUtllaln V•llay
$21-el Dana HID•
• 0 24
• SOUTH COAST LBAOUE OS-.t SI Jolwl Bol(:o •
CAJ"tSTRANO VAL.LSY (M) 01~ HIU. l•I MV) MMIMA (Ml
14 E$1111'enza
10 s.n.110
'6 011-Saddletclcll (et NH)
7 02t-CdM let OCC)
14 Foolfl,. '2 Olf-Cacil••r-V•llf'r n E&PWania .. 02...-£1 Toro
7 Foothlll
Sn-La Quinta (at Wtstmurl
OS-.1 MIUlkan
U N2-lil Laoune leecll
N~oste Miia (II OCC)
27 Corone ~ Mer 7 N2-at Irvine s~n Cllf'Mlile ~n Cttmentt
LAGUNA HACH C 1-2)
0 IUIW!e Parll
Os-Dene Hlfts
OIHf'YfN SAN CLogNT• (l·H)
IJ S.ntlQo 011-11 Hun I llltlon 9eecll 01.-Ftn Vallev (at OCCl
02'-<>c:Mn View (at Wstr)
N2-at WHlmln•I• Nf-Edlaon let OCCl
6 Elsinore 7 Dena H111s
14 Olt-al Minion VJllO
29 ~aouna Hill let MV)
• N2-b'f1
o eor-dll tMr 2' ES!lncla Sll-"11 Cuo Vaoev o+-.t lrvlnl
7 • 21
N,_EI Toro (al MV)
OC•AN Vl&W (M)
11 Esttrtde 10 LA Quinta
S2t--CCIM (el NH>
Os-<:o&la Mete
012-Unlvenltv (al Irvine)
3 01._Woodbtidol (al lfvtne)
21 cnr-.t NewPort Harbor
DANA HILLS (1-J)
7 Sonor•
Olt-el Mt. Mloutl ($0)
21 OIJ-l.1tu11e Hiiia
2l 026'-0ane H a
0 CYSlress
Stt-t Gardene
0.-WHlern (al HB) Ol~tn VelllY (et
019-EdllOll (el
026-Mirlne <• "'""'r)
JI N2-"'Ealancla ~
NIWPOtlT HQ~ (2•0• 1)
77 Senta Ant
20 Ir.tine
I Torrev PlllM
.. Le~ leedl
S»--#.llslon Vleio
Os-El Toro
012-1 C.PO VelM'V
I Olf-1NIN
7 ~I Toro
Nl'-11 MllUooil ViltO
ANG•LUS LEAGUR
MATSa D•I '2·1)
13 Fountllln VelilY
N:t-et Hunt on Blad! ..,.._.., W•I ~ter 2• HUllllMlon 8Nctl S»-WOOCR>rldoe (at lrvlne)
~stancla
012-Saddlebtclr. (SA 9owll
7 cnr-.1 s.n Clemente t• N~ Hiit (el MV)
~Sen Olt90 Htlhc
:tO Senti Ana ValleY
JO S.11 AN
S27-W•tmlnsler (SA 9o'llWI) <*-Hin. 8eK'll (ti OCC)
17
0
16
O Olf-Costa Meat (al OCC)
14 026-Laouna INdl
•L TOaO U•?)
J2 C.alll P-orlr. O 012-el llshol> Atnal
11 Olt-ellhOP Mont. CSA eown
21 02 ...... 1 Plus x 1' Nl~nlverslty <•t lrvlM)
Hf-<orone dll Mir
1' Fountain Valltrf
f Velencll S2'-frvN (el MV)
NP:L
NATIONAL COMl'aRSMc:I
S.nFrandSQ
Allenta --Nlw°'1Mnl
Chicago
MlnnHOll
Detroit
GrMn8•v
TamHlev
Wnt
W LT • 0 0
2 2 0
2 2 0 2 2 0
c.itr1bl
3 1 0 2 2 0
1 3 0 l 3 0
1 3 0 ~ .. ,
-~ct~, PA
1000 111 17 soo m n
500 71 75
soo " 1m
1.50 79 " .soo u '°' .250 " 104 .tso u ao 250 . 62 IS
Dalla• 3 1 0 750 10 64
NV Giants 3 1 0 750 f7 71 SI. Loul1 2 2 0 .SOO 111 9'
W•shintlon 2 2 0 .SOO 104 ff
PlllledllPtlla 1 1 o .uo n n
AMllRICAN COMll•RINCI .......
o.nver
Saallle sen Dlooo
l<aMa&C Iv
PlllU>ufOll
Cle...itnd Clnclnnetl
Houston
W"t 4 0 0
3 1 0
3 1 0
2 2 0
2 2 0
Centr1ll
2 2 0
I 3 0
0 c 0
0 4 0
Ile.st
1000 107 71
.750 6S sa
.750 125 ..
500 120 91
500 .. '2
.500 ...
.250 Sl 17
.000 76 114
000 5' 132
Miami 4 0 0 ICIOO 12' 41 NY Jets
N-Enelencl
lndlenePGll•
Buffalo
:t I 0 750 111 16
2 2 0 .SOO 76 N
1 J 0 2501f1'2 0 • 0 .000 '7 107
MIMIY's k-~ 33, San Oleoo JO
SOIWY's~ NY Gllnll at lltml
hfdan al t>envw tCNcnMI • at 1 11.m.) Buffalo af lndlanapOlfl )~end et l<.nws Clly
Dallas et Ch!Qeo
Mleml If SI. Louil
N-Enolend al HY Jtta S..1111 at Minnesota
Allen!• et Sen Frendaco
Detroit et San Dleoo Green_~~~ at Tampa a.Y New .,.,..._"' at Houston
PlllladolPllla II W•~ton
MMMY'a Oeme
Cincinnati ti Pllta.bur9h (Olanntl 7 et 6)
Raiden Jl, Qa,..,1 JO
s.-.. bV °"'"'" SanDleOO
1t1ldel's
7 J 3 17-30
6 7 7 1)-33
LA-f'G Behr '2
SD-Winslow 11 HU from Foull
lltn•nchk• llilcll) LA-f'G Behr )6
SD-FG 8enlrschlle 51
LA-Allen 1 run (8ahr kldt)
LA-Allen lO HH from ~•II (8ehr
klclll •
~G 8enlndlll1 33 SO-Jackson 1 run (Benirschll• kldt)
50-FG 8eninehllie 41
SD-Lowa 32 JrilorctPtlon raturn (Bonlrtelllt• klelt) •
LA-Alen 2 run ClilClk ranecl)
LA-Alen 1 run llktlt kick)
A-7•,1'1
GAMll STATISTICS so
First downl 23
fltuslle.s·vardl 32· 1'7
Pesslnt vard' lff
1t11urn rerdl SS PaHft 19·31-1
SacM BY 2-IS
Punts •·CS
Fumblft·lost 2·0
Ptnelttorvarch l-62 Timi of Poaaesslon n:ew
INDIVIDUAL STATrSTICS
LA
26
27·'9 ,...
C7
2•-3J·l
4·31 )·33
1-1
~
27.5'
RUSHING-San Die90, Jackson 29-ISS,
Fout• Htn1nus J), McGee 2-(m.nus S) UK
Anoalft, Allell 11•47, Hawttlna •·), Klno
2· 1. Pruitt 2·0, Plllnktll Hmlnus 2>.
PASSING-San Dleeo. Fouta 1f•)7-l-227, LOI Anelllt, Plunkett
2•·>l·M63.
RECEIVING-San O~, Wlllllow t· llf. HOIOhan f· 71, Jackson >-21. Cllelldler
2•7 Silvtrl l·f Los A,......, Chrls191\Hn l·IM, Allen • 62, lr•ncll •·'2 ... m_..
3•62, Hew\lns 2·1f, Pr\1111 1·1.
MISSED FIELD GOALs-Hont
<=-.. ......
A" TOf' ll
Tiie '" 10 ... ,,.. Ill Ille AaMCl•fed Pren tolltve tootbeU llOll, wit!\ fl,.Jl•Ple« 1101-. In
""'"',_.· lfM rKCM"dl, to•al Minis end ren1o.in. In,,.~ llOll ...,.,.fl'VI .
l.Httraik• (S1l 3+o \, 11' 1
2 Tues m 1-H 1.077 J
J Ofllo Stitt 121 3•0-0 fff S 4 .-.,,,, St1t1 J 0.0 U'4 7
'tkKlofl COlleoO , .. 0 ll 1 ,. 6 We$11!1191on ,...., QO f
7 Oklellomt J+O 1'7 11
I BrflNm Y04/frt •+t 711 6 f Frorl4a S!1t1 J+o US lS
10 Ok~ Stele J·H -"1 12
11.SMU 2• .. 0 560 12
12 c.otv 2~ 0 S$1 20
13Cltrmon J•I.. 4n 2
14 Midi Mif 166 16
Ii.USC 1-+0 I 17
16.Mla • '" ) ' 0 100 4 11 UCLA M •O 153 t
II Georoia Toell 2~·t lOO
It Notre Oatne N-0 J6
20 Al*ltn M o ff '' c ..... ...._.~
SATURDAY Wn.t
Utall I Vt Cli !alt FUlllrton 11 Se.1111 Alll 9oW!
l.$U 1¥1 SC: al LA CotlMum 030 1tm.I
Atbona I ••
•
12!JO p.m.)
San Jose SI. et C forl'lie
Miami, Ohio al Wuhlnglon
Pac1flc at Oreoon
NeW Me•lco St. af FrftnO St., n
UC D1vla at C:al Poly ($1,0), n ~•da·Les 'Vleoes el Hewall, n
C.t Siiia Havward •• C-ol Sl•I• North• rldot, n •
Pwfltnd SI al Humboldt St.
AIUM Pacific., San Francisco SI.
Slcremen10 St. et S.nl• Clara, n • •tdlln
Lone BMdl St. 11 Arizona. n
0rll0ft St. et ldlhO, n
Utall at Wvomlno
Cdofedo SI. II AJt Force
Northern Arllone ti Nt-leda·lteno
ldeho St at Montane St. New Mexico ,, THU•EI PHO, n
E. Weshlnoton at Boise SI., n • 0 Montane et Weber St., n
5eu9' Vendtr11111 of Alabama
Eesl Cerollne et North C.rotlna St .. n
Geor9" al South Cerollne, n
TIMHMI St. 11 Flofkla TtrnPll al Florldl SI., n
TtnnttMt al Aut>urn
CllrMon 11 Georole Tedi
K•nsu •I Nortll catOllna Rice 11 Ml1ml, Fla.
Tulenl 11 MlulsalPPI MlmPtlls St. •I Soutllwn Mlnlsill>PI. n
Vlr111n11 et Vlrolnl• Tedi A~len SI. al VMI e. T-... .SI. at Cltldol. n NW LOUlsllna al N£ Ulu!Mlne, n
Nortll Texas St. al Lou1tlal!ll Tedi, n
s.tllwttt <N1vy al Arllen .. s, n
ArklMM St. et T .... A&M. n
leYlor II Texas Tech. n
Kensas St el Oklahome TCU ef SMU, n
L.oulsvllle II HoultOA, n
Oldahome St. el Tufse, n
TIJCU•Ar11nt1on •I LAmar, n
MldW•t lllnol.a el towe (Channel 2 al 9 e.m.) Mlc:NMn al lndlane
Purdue ti MlctilOen SI.
Otl1e St. et Mlnnosof1
Norlhwtsllfll et Wisconsin
Notre Deme at Mluourl (Ctllnnet 7 •'
IUO p.m.) w .. 1 Ttua SI. 11 Iowa St.
Bell St et Northern llllnols, n
Eastern Mk:hloe11 II 9owtino Green
Ctnl,.I Mldlloan 11 l<enl SI.
TQledo •I Otllo U
Drekt ii IHlnola SI.
lndllne SI. at Wlclllla St
MerWH at WMlll'n Mlch!Nn ....
~esk• et SvrKUM TtllH al Penn SI
'West Vlrolnla et Pill Wake FO!'ISI 11 'Mrvtend
Duke al Army
Rhode laltnd at Brown
Bucknell 11 Prtraton /
Cincinnati II Rutws ColOttt et Cornell LAflYtlle •I Columbia
Connecticut el Vilt
New Hamc>lhlra II Derlmoull\ HolY Cross al Hervard
Devlchon at Penn
Ollaw1r1 al Leflloll c.mmunnv ulele
IATUtlOAY'S GAMSS ~·dflc·f c: ........ ICt
Tift Yl. Goldin Wtsl <•t Orano. CoHI), 1:30 P.tn
BIMr•h•ld ., Ml Sen Antonio, 1;30 P.l'I\. FUiierton 11 Cerrlloa
Lonv 8aacn CC •I l!.t Camino
MhMell c..-tl'IC'9
Saddltbeck et Or1noe COHI
Santi Ana et Riverside CC
Citrus 11 San DleOO MeMI
Palomar ti Soufhweslem
.... C191 .......
Los Anoolt1 CC •I llllo Hondo, 1 Pm. Oeler! at LA SoufhwHI, I P.tn.
Compfon 11 Mt. San Jacinto, 7 P.m.
Wist LOS Al\Oltlff 11 HellCOCk
E•at LOI AnNlft el San larlwlrdlno
LA HarGol' ot Ventura
LA Pltl'ce at MootNrk
Santa Bert>ora et LA V1...,
Glendale 11 Anlllolla Vellev
Gronmont al Mlle, Ariz.
Wtstorn C•I Institute 1t lmHl'lel Vtllef Sen Ole90 CC et Pholfll11
Santi Monica CC el Glendele, Arll
A• MIMI ti 7:30 p,m. """61 lndlteld
COMMUNfTY COLL•Oa LOG
Gtildeft w .. t <2·•>
(hc:itk·f C II •cct)
21 Of•net Coeat J
11 lenl• Ana 1 • Sat, s.t 29 -Tott•
Sal., Oct • -•' Patee1ane• Sal., Oct 1)-Ive
Sat., Ocl 29 -Ml. Sen Antonfo• s.1, Oct. 21 -., Lone le.di cc:•
I. Nov , -Cerrffol• s.t., ~ to-at FUlllrton-
Sat. Nov 17 -El ComlM"
I., HOY 2• -•I --..n.r-
Of'Mlil c .... <•· 2) (MhMlll G•:lstMM) ) OoicNn Wnf JI
0 FUll«ton SI
Sat. SOClt 2t -llddllblell0
Sat , 00 1:t -11 Rtwnldt"
Sal • Oct 10 -s.n Dllto Mfta.
Sal,. Oct. 11 -et ~tll'n°
Sal,. Nov $ -Seil Oll00° Sat., Nov it -al ,.....,.,.. s.1 , Nov 11 -CftM•
Tllur1.., ,,... " -.. hftt• Altil Sa•••••'* (\.1) ,....._,, ur,..,
IJ EI Ctn'llfto n
-.. Ml '9ft AntONo J kt .. ...,. 2' -... °'"'"Coal!* kt., Oct • -1tl¥WIJel• kt .. Oct ,, -et hi\ Oltoo Mfta•
t OC1 N -SOUWYWttt.,,.•
S.t~ Oct '1 -al Sift OIHO* s.1.~ a-Pe~ S.t,. HOV 10-II Cltnft• s.1.. ...... 17 -Seft1-Ana. . °'"°'" toflltr'll!C• ..,,,..
NI-SI. PllA (SA Bowl)
N~s.Nlle (SA 9oW1
""" sCMd ICMCMe THUIHOAY
SM View Leaeul
StddlttNcck vs Costa Mesa (al NtwPOf'I H1rlllb0r)
c.tufY L-.ue Senta Ana vi. VIiia Park (al El Modena) .,,...... Leaeul
El Oofado vs. l(atell (al Le Pelfna
Pal1t) or.....u..u.
Trov II Vei.ncla
NW!.......,_ Wtllmlnaler Vl. Meter 001 (al Slnta
Ana 8oWI)
Los Aml90a al We&tern
'1llOAY s.. VII'# L-.ue
Newport Hertor vs.. WoodbfldOI <•I Irvine)
Leoune 8Ncll rs. Corona dtl Mer Cal
NewllOf'I Her'bor)
Estancia -.s University (at Orenge
Coa1t)
5eutll Ceea1 &Mtue
Irvine vs.. El Toro (at Mjnfon Vlelol
MIHlon Vlelo ti D1n.t Hiiis
San Clemente et ~Pistrano VelltY
C«!Nrv lAo9UO Cenvon ar El Modine
OrtnM n. FOOfhll C•I Tustin)
Tustin vs Senta Ana Valltv (11 Senta
Ana Bowt)
ll""*9 LM9lll Kennedy vs CYPl'HS (II Wtallfn)
LOI AlemllOS vs E'"'°enu (If Valen·
cit) ....... ..,.
• , Le Q\Anla YI Mltlne (at Wnt"'1111i.r>
Lono a..cn Wllaon et Hunonolon a..cti Oceen Vtew ., Gardenl (I P.m.)
La9UM Hiiis at 'Mmlr llanc:ho Alllmltos er Fullerton La H.ttw'a ti l.elllWOOd
Sor«e ., lrM·Ollnda
Troy al V alenda
Artltle •I lol5e Grandi
Gardttb Grove va. Anahllm lat La Palme Perk)
S.ntleeO et La Mlreda ~ ., ROWiand
ltilhep Amici ti SI. FrlllCls
Norttl Torrencit al BlihoP Monl90r'Mt'Y
AlemenY at $1. Paul
Plus x 11 COlnPlon
SATURDAY .......... u..u. Pacific.I YI. LMra le.I LA PP'M Palk) .............
Sanlllt vs. Fount•ln Ve.Jev (ti Senta Ant loWI) '
SI. John Bosco .., .. Edison lat Huntlnoton
leedl) --~ Perl! er S.vanne
o.... ..........
DAVSY'I l.OQ(9a c~ ... di)
-5' M01trt IOI bonito, • vellowl1M, 1 ioO.
flall, 1• callco bus. " Mild '*'· '° m.dlerll, 'II ICUIPfn, 1 ~. l
ftKado DAMA WHA.llll -M ellllllln. 221 be.u,
12• bonito, 1' YlloW1tll, I roO. fWI, 35 madtal'll, 21 lhteohnd, 7 ICIJfpin.
N•wrottT LAMOINO CMIW"'1
a.di) -Q '"""'· 164 IMln!to, )0 be.SI, 2 Y'llowlell, 32 mecMrel.
..
MV•NTM aACL One Andys Meteor Cit ICfl.lt)
Slr!oot (l.oaciltv) R E! ToOd (Dftomtt)
A1iO racH: I C P, &.UV,
udl $1ovtL. ... .., 4Mtf'IW1" Time llN 215.
SJ •XACTA () S) Plld MJCIO
•IOHTM !IACL on. tnl1' DAO T rlckti Cl'ctrtW tp rller) 1.20 Ut 3 00
Tract Miu (Malet> UO 2.40
Dfltfl $Q1\ 1tAndlfnolll • 00
Abo rec.cs: ~•rlt, Geometric,
EKPe.Olflon, Hti•Nt Hunt«, SPorta P
Momerev Rcnot.
Time• 200 1/S.
U &XACTA lMI lllkl UUO.
NINTH a.&ca. OrM milt lror
ChalrlUI Moo6e {Dnomtt) 6AO JM UO
Klkl Horte 1 (VorctUYa .. I I.AO UO NoDle Arllltla (Afldtnon) UO Alto rlCld Nll11 Star, Como $11',
K lllDuck LObOll
Time. 2 01 211. U &XACTA C2•11 paid "2AO
U PtCI< l&X l1 4•1 tnd H·S-:tl Nld $l,1'UO wlTll Nrit 'Wlnllen. (flve llOtlHI
CamtOVlf SID,75UI
HNTH aACI. One mite pace.
FrO&lrSk"'"' l,Slltrn) ., IO 15 20 UO
tktt Mer1n1 (l<oe.nit> 610 5 IO
SCold'b ~ (Pierct) 7.AO
Al10 tKtel ldMt Bebe, Hliar10UI 8fnl, Wlnnlno Game, l.ovll Led, $1v 0.rklt
Time 2.01 J1S.
al IXACTA IS l) Nld '277..50
Attend nte· US7.
fttrMM
MOHOAV'I ••SULT1 (l!tll .. l•·•v..., ....,..,
AllAINAMS
PllllST RACS. 6 futtonO>,
Las SVVI IHlno•wrllll JIO U.CO t.!! Crlckit ( .. tin) • 60 ~ •v V. J Flemo1 (Arlia) UO
AllO racecr· Of111, Hlrtlltto, lACIY
LUCkY Jami, 0-Jor. Misti HorOlt, Hyatau Keltm, Prelre $ nm. 1n 21J.
$S IXACTA (NI paid 11UO.
AHALOOSAS
laCOMD RAU. S turlOnol
... Timi W°'1d (~I) 7 00 3.40
SClolltd Mo1Wv < Ectwlll'Cll) 720
Slx Tlmet Eear lwtinel
uo uo uo
AIM rkecl Fencv'a Oultlta,
Horse, C..-Co, All·Tte.
A Dertl
Time: 1,(11 2/S.
til IXACTA C4·1) peld steoo
OUA.llHRHOAHS
Tit•D lltACL :UO yerCI
Azure Oldlt 1Hlr1) UO UI UO
Moon um <FllMlroe> 1uo lot
Amtrlclll Athlete <cr.ew> UO AIM reced: R-lnd, Off Llmllt
ll•rntleler, s.ortlnt lid, Quarter Oecklt, •un Eddie Jon_, WatlOftl s.crot. Time: 17;19
!IOU.TH lllAC•. 350 vetdl
SPecteculer "'" (Hermen} uo 500 uo
... $ur1 Tonv (C.mpt)el) UO 4 '°
$4mlln Sldt (Thome•) 6.10
Abo racM: llembllll Jet, Mm• Pof Of Gold, Wr.,.,,,., Golan hv, Robin lri\lltl,
Br.,._n, NSH Shof1 $NC.
Time: 17A
IS IXACTA (M) Nlct SlfS.00.
~OUOHM•DS
'"'"" RAC8. ' turtono1. Ut11 ... lened <EatrNI) f 40 4M
SY's OrMm (Pedroul S.01
HorlourM Barb (Oil..,.,.)
uo
3'° ...
Aleo raced· Joe'• Rlllno Ster, Awev, Miriam, GMllne .. *'
llnw. 1:13 3/S.
SIXTH RACL 6 fur1oneS Trod (Scott) UO 3M UO
Blac:ll MrCNM (NolJZ) UO lAO
Nol Now (MllcMll) 6.20 Allo rececl. Nashville Native, Sharp eunnr. Peu 11 To Ml, Hatt.bit, sttv
l.Mcler.
Time· 1:12 115 .
SS •XACTA (1-6) Hid l320 00
YVIMTH RACE. 6 funorwt.
Mr. Bldl'llllO (Hansen) • UO 3.10 UO
Merli• Em111rcw (Noouez> 14.40 • '° Red Ou1tv (Mani) UO
Also recad She's R.,.., FIMI Re-
flllltlon, Ev1slve Tvranl, GlorV Abo\OI
Time. 1:12 4/S. n DAIL y DOU•L• (2-t) oeld m IO
•tGHTH llAC•. I 1116 rnAH. I.ore v .. (Hentenl aM 3.10 J 20 ~l~~l~I 400 !.:
Allo raClld 8ooll End. Tenoc:tloa, Mia· slSSIPPI Girt SI.say Rider •
Time. UI 2/S. U •XACTA (Ml pakf 7UO.
MtHTH lllACa. 1 111' mlle.s.
ltrour Man 8oO (Mine) J.IO 111 UO "-z• Nall.e (Murlllly) SAO ut
Bolten /Mole: (HIMenl J_.
AIM> raced. One Masle.r. T P. Tlme Pal,
Slllln On Go, TIKtlUIOnt Rutw, OoPs AR
Timi; 1;47 215.
T•MTH IL\Cll.' furloNa. MY Donne B. (Mina)• IS..-0 fOI 00 P. C.'.1 Faig (N""°) JOM IA Fen CIUD (LllrnAnc:a) JM
Aho recad: Merltvn Jo, Ml Vfla 'IM,
SUmmen Sir•, Net.,,..., Net.U..
Tlme: 1:l0 4/S.
IS •XACTA <Hl ""3.50.
U fltCK sot (7·2-t+4•5) Mid 5'.Afl 50
wfth illf .,1nnlne llcMts (flft honel). Ne
carryover.
•LEV•MTH ltACL • furlonos.
Earliest <..,_naen> uo uo 2-44 A~I Iva (Ollvern) 2.IO UO
Don I '• Oe.mMI (PMrou) 1AO
Allo reced lnleMlvo Cere, Tootle Watt· .,.., Melc:h Pwlny, R"'*'I Ahead.
Timi: 1:10 '1S.
IS •XACTA (6-7) Hid ... JI.
TWILPTH aAC•. 6 turtonos.. •
Pine For Oolcl <Omno1) SAO uo l.00
RUii Tiie Jun {Murolly) "'° J.40 PYramlcl HIOh (Hit9«1) I ...
Alto rlCM ~. First L P ,
Rl•lno YUkon, Lome'• Knodlout.
Time: 1: 11 2/ S.
SS •XACTA (5-2) paid S102.00
TH•T••NTH uc•. 1 1/16 mllli.
aomtiey a.rtlllder <tMna> no uo :a'° ltoral Gian (Eslnlde) lUO 00
Le Verno'a lie Mac COeleadlDo> 3..20
Aird> recad: lrlsh B•lller, Ice It, Al•
, ltelenc:e, Silent Asian, eanner•a Btuff.
Time: 1;"-ss IXACTA CN) paid Ut7.00.
Altendl'ICe f, 160 (11llmated).
"
•
....
,,,..._...
lnnl"i\,Chlcaco Cube pitcher Rick Satcllffe douea ~•a.ma Leon Durum with cbampaane after the abe cllnched the National 1.eaiue Eut title Monday lpt lD Plttabur~.
utcliffe:
Be is Cubs'
Cinderella
Traded to Cubs from Cleveland,
he is dominating witb 16-1 mark
CHICAGO (AP) -In the
Chic.aao Cubs• fairy tale sea.son,
Rick Sutcliffe was Cinderella.
Monday m&ht 10 Pittsburgh,
Sutcliffe, 16-1, capped one of the
dtost dominating seasons by a
starting pitcher isa recent history
by beating the Pirates 4-l on a
two-hitter to give Chicago iU first
National Leaaue East Division
title in the clu&• history.
It also guaranteed the Cubs
their first post-season trip in 39 years.
When the towerin~ rigbt·hand-
cr came to Ch1cago from·
Oevetand on June l 4. he brought
a 4-S record and nagging rumors
that be was washed up. He
captured twq of bis first three
dccilions in a Cubs uniform and
then notched the next 13. His only
lo came June 29 at Los .Ange ks ..
"You run out of adjectives fora
guy who pitches like he does,"
Cbicaao Manaaer Jim Frey said.
At 6-foot-7 and 215 pounds,
Sutcliffe is an imposina presence
oo the mound, aided by a fastball
that can reach 95 mph. He has
struck out 154 batters in t 50. l
innina.s with the Cubs this year,
white walkiaajust 39 and hurling
tbJeC shutouts His earned run
averaae is 2.69.
Despite his size. the soft-
poken Sutcliffe is reluc!aft to be
talled the key in the Cubs'
championship roll. He rarely
failed to remm<l people the Cubs
1Verc 10 first place when he arrived
from Ocveland, along with
Ocorsc Frazier and Ron Hassey,
in exchanae for Mel Hall, Joe
U.S., Australia vie .
In Davis Cup Friday
BALTZ IERGERON s.TMTUTMU.
WESTClFF CKAPn
427 E 17th St. Costa Mesa
"' n
f .
•
PIRI ICEW,ORT
ll'IATlllEllTS
HEALTH
CLUBS 1£NNIS
SWIMMING, plu,
much more' Sorry
no pets Model\
open daily q lo 6
~~~
Newport BHc.h So.
l700 16th Strttl
(atOom1
642-5113
•
SYDllEY
01ARR
,
Cl
th lilJPil
MondCJ)' ru F idoy 9 1 t ~or?~ ptn
330 W. Bay
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
ca ar._ COlll9 DAIL v PfLOT/TUMd1y. Stptem
Newlptlper
KIDS-EARN GREA l TRIPS AND PRIZES!
AC ROSI
1 OtdMY1t9
5 8eeeotl
10Hm»
14Jel-
15 Burning
18 Ettlnic danc:.
17 Beuwood
1t St9dium
20 Stretdl OU1
21 TrllPM
22 Loe1heolne
23 Not 90not
258awy
28 Fall guy
30 Puton
S 1 Nomtnat roll
a4 Modulee
3e Agave nt1er
81-0.Fr#lee
39 lmm.oulat•
42 Twitch
43~palm
... MeMut<ed out
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TUE SOA Y SEPTE. MBER 15. 1984 -
~;·s .RB sued over landfill fi&p
Inmate
torches
Manson
VACAVIL
LE (AP) -
Masa klller
Char lea
Manaon
w • •
drenched
with paint
thinner and
aet afire
today by a
fellow In-
mate who
told guards
Manson had threatened him
becauae of his rellgloua belleft,
authorltlei said.
Manaon, serving a llfe
aentence for the et.tit 81aylr1Q• of
actfeN Stiaron late and elgh ·
others, was treated' for ACOnd-
and third-degree btirna In the
prtaon Infirmary and was In good
condition, said Bob Gore,
apokeaman for the atate Correc-
tions Department.
Manson, 48, was In the hobby
ahop of the California Medical
Faclll1y; the state's prison for
plyctltatrtc pt'.tlonera, when the
other lhmate, a member of the
Hare Krishna sect serving a
sentence for murder, doused him
with ftammabte llquld and eet him
afire, Gore a81d. Manaon auf •
fered burna over 18 percent of hi•
body, concentrated on hla face,
ecalp and hands, In the 8:•5 a.m.
attack, Gore said.
Nation
Manhunt continues for
five escaped Kansas
State Penitentiary con-
victs./ A&
World
Tass likens Reagan's
arms talk to a •vessel
without water.'/ ~4
Mlndlt:Body
New devices used to
amplify or substitute for
sound are Improving
therapy for the hearing
lmpalred./81 -
Sport&
Newport Harbor's Ho
Truonghasbeenchosen
as the Dally Piiot's Player
of the Week for his part In
tie with Huntington
Beach./C1
INDEX
Erma Bombeek ·
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Bualneaa
California Newe
Clualfled
Com lea
Cronword
Death Notloa
Horoacope
Ann Lander•
Mind and Body
Mutual Fund•
Natk>nal News
Opinion
Peper UZI
Potlet Log
Public Nottcet
Spe>rtt
Stock Market.I
TeleYtston
lhe819'1
Weather
World New8
82
88
A3
84-8
A4
C6-8
88 ca cs
C7
82
81·2
B8
A4
A7
81
A3
CM
c~i
82
B3 , A2
A4
Anaheim company claims n·egltgence ·.
cost over m,iuon tn proceeds
BJ ROBERT BARKER °' ............
The city of Huntiqsto.n Beach was
. hit with 11 $S.2S million lawsuit
Monday by an Anaheim Hilla com-
pany that was blocked from removina
oil and other waste materials from the
city"s Ascon Landfill.
Attorney Richard Gardner said
"negliient repr111tntation" by Hunt·.
ington Beach officials cost the Aitcn
!Petroleum Inc. of. Anaheim Hills
Aerobics? it•• a real 4rag
When tbe lla&1c lla.ement Sha~ Up center ln Coata Mesa
held a .. ~~blc wear partJ" Monday illall~ BW
Danlapof lleK toC>k tbemattbettword. Tbeldea wu
$250,000 in labor and COfttlnlCUOn
co ts and SS mtlbon in po1ential
profits from recyclfna ~troleum
wa tc materials. Other ••qents of the city'' wbo
Gardner didn't identify were·~ for
an additional S2 mllhon in OntlJl,t
County Superior Coun.
Gardner claims that city officials
were receptive to nqoliatirt& with
Asterx and ano\her company, Con·
Florlda 's citius pestilence
wQrries Califorriia growers
OC agrtculture officials keeping close watch
for signs the f rutt tree killer is moving west
Fnm ltaff and wire reporu
A citrus disease that is decimatina
nurseries in Aorida has never been
found in California and steps arc
beina taken to make sure the pestilence doesn't move ..,est.
"There is a real concern it might
come this way," said Jim Hamett, an
a_Jriculture commissioner in Oranae
County.
"We don't need any more diseases
out here and panicularly one we don't
know anything about," said Hamett.
.. It could be a major problem if it aot
here."
Orange County, living up to its
namesake, is rich tn orange producing
acreage. There arc more than S,200
acres planted in orange trees, nca.rty
900 acres of lemons and more than
300 acres of trees producing
grapefi'uit.
Tbe disease plaguing floridi fruit
growers is known u citrus canker,
which attacks the leaves of fruit·
bearina trees. Growcn in Florida
have been burninf entire orcha:rds to
eliminate the pestilence .
Tbe California Departmebt of
Agriculture Monday dispatcbc:tl five
plant patholQlists to Florida to help
authorities detect and eradicate the
citrus canker, which cowd cripple or
kill the state's citna crop. (Pleue Me CITRUS/ A2)
Newport firm's herpes drug
may hit market in two years
87 PHIL SNEIDEJ\MAN under the name lsoprinosine in 72
OttfleDllr,...•..,, countries including Great Britain,
A Newport Beach company that France and West Germany.
markets the drug inosiplex outside Today's report on the drug was
the United States hopes to put it on made at a symposium on herpes and
domestic a.-mac~Ytt--aft-er--A~IDS 1turing-wbidt-&. :-David
studies showed .. encoura&ina" results Miller, who co-da.rcctcd the . UCI
in treatina herpes and an affii:tion herpes study, presented his test
similar to AIDS. results.
The tlerpes study was done by UC Dr. Mitlcrisdirtttorofthedivision
Irvine resean:hcn. of infectious disease in UCrs Depart·
Newport Pharmaceuticals Inter-ment of Obstetrics and Gynccoloay.
national, Inc., announced today in His partner in dircctina the stud)' was
l.Ondon the rnults of recent tests of Dr. William H. Wickett Jr., assistant
the drug. which is sold primarily clinical professor of obstetrics and
gynecology at UCJ. .
AIDS, a fatal malady that SUP'.
presses tbe body's immune system,
has killed 2. 70S people in the United
States, most of them homosexual$.
tivcr-of-Haiti;-intravcnous cb aa
abusers and hemophiliacs.
Herpes is not fatal but is spttad
each year to hundreds of thousands of
new victims mostJy by sexual contact.
It cau5t1 outbreaks of ~inful som
and affects up to 20 million Ameri-cans. according to the Center for
Disease Control in Atlabta.
(Pleue 1ee BltllPE8/A2)
Getting high on the seas
not like drunken.driving
Newport Harbor ·crulsln and boozin ·
doesn •t present law enforcement problem
1r Newport Harbor as the blgcst
happy ,hour on the Ora nae Cout. why
lS tt that harbor patrolmen have not madeoned~nkcn boaunaanalth1s ycar1 .
To t>CJin. dnnkina wh le optratlna
a boat i not illcpl. A manini as
standard cq~1pmcn1 o omc
yachtsmen and a ca or two ofbccr as
nccces fuel for othc m out
on • daylong :1 ii.
Newport Harbor. aftct U. 11 the
eu Oil Co. of~ Beaeb, IO mnove
wuta from the 111e without COit IO
lhechy. ·
The two companies developed a
plan, took out a 11 million inswance ~and insWled pipes after tellUJ& city hcenses and permits.
But residents near lhc 37-ecrt !landfill at Hamilto'n Aven..e and ~ia Street ac:rou from F.dison ~ilJi ScbooJ, PJQteslt'd, ~i'"-1 (eats
STEVE
IAlllE
P ERSP[Cll\l
the nation la
Bolsa;s
median
blasted
inHB
Condo residents say
new h!ghway project
creates a hazard
., aoam BARKO °' .............
Huntinaton Beach residcnu
~Monday that .. ~" city
officials approved a bi&bwa)' median
in &oat of lheir condominiums th8t
will limit the aa:as of emerweacy
vebides and eould cost lives. ··1(s idiocy," aid Katby Phillipa;
"rm a 11wx abd I bow that leCOadl are imporla.Dt. They can meu lives. ...
Pbillim aid about too midents of
b HI'&. Ri' l e untinston vaera con:
domlniums have siped petitions
callin&for the aution ma lcft.,.band
tuna lane to ibeir homes at SWt
Street for · riorihboUDd vebidc:i on
Bola Cll.ica Street.
F~ Phillips and otbcn
contend that a=Oftiei.lls failed to notify them of for tbe median:
ieliiit dieY , \beY aid. WU when YtOttcn from the R.J. Ndble
construction compe:ny of Onnee
ooumt ClODClete c:aruer tbil mooUL .. It took me six calls to city ball iA
(1'w1 ... llm>l.AJll/ A2J
Freeway
smashup
hurts two
------
Disne land workers strike;
pickets surround Kingdom
y \h A aoclated rcn
t 0 sne}'.land was truck b> more
than l, 00 of at 5,000 \\Orker e rly
tod )' after members of five union
rejected. a new contract offi r. but
m tlagcment id the park would
continue operating.
The trike w called at 6 a.m. and
pickets went up immediately, aaid
union pokt man Bob 8leiwe1 s.
and a s1mil r numbet from Dian f 1
tudio in Burbank, }~ores id.
"Everybod}I has been tnuncd.
Everybody has me~ !he minimum
rcqu1rtmenl for '' int on an c-
t1on whtch iuwo da)' : Flore id.
Huntington Beach re 1dent
Th offi were to be cl d, wb1Ch
would afTCCl plann1~ 1f the tnkc
were drawn out, he 1d.
Contrary lo some mcdaa reports,
therr were no plans to brina in
employee from Disneyworld m
Florida or Tokyo'-t Disneyland,
Flore aad.
"The purpose of the strike is not to
trike, but to get back to neio-
uations," be said. ••They'll be picket-
mg 2• hours a da)." .
Discu ions with the company
'broke off around midnight and
workers were advised to report to
pklcet location at entrances and exits
to the amusement park.
Bur a Disneyland spoktsman said
park's JO a.m. openin1 'today
uld not be delayed by the strike.
"We're ready to JO, .. said Al Aorrs,
pefVisor: of pubhcity.
The park has a pool of I ,400 non-
union employees., including super-~sory personnel and clerks, and
several hundred additional workers
from WED Enterprises, a design
division of Walt Disney Productions,
Haa the Magic KJng<iom lost
hs magic? See story on A8
Sharlene Vander Molen. a non·un1on
employee who works in Disneyland's
entertainment depanment. said she
and other workers have been rcceiv-
inf. trainina to take over for strikers.
'I'll be St-tlinJ metthandisc in
Fantas)land," said Yander Molen.
who nonnally dresses in custume and
plays the rote of a Disney cartoon
charaCter. She said company rules
prohibit her from saying which
character She pla)s.
She said he i not worried about
crossins picket tines.
"But J haven't done it yet either,"
she added.
The supervisory penonnel were
drawn from t •of l 7 divisional oflkcs
in and behind the tctnes at the park.
.
Union workers reprcsenunaa third ·
of Disneyland's employee~ turned
do"'n the company's late t offer on
Monday, a week after votina down a
pay-freeze contract the company
proposed, said United Food ~d
Commercial Workers spokesman
Michael O'Rourkc.
I The offer included a reduced pay-
freeze demand-two years in teadof
three years. -and a "grandfatheri1l4''
provision. Under the offer. certain
health and welfare benefits, seniority
and job security provisions would be
·maintained for current employees.
but not for new employt>es, officijls
said.
With 69.2S pereent voting against
the contract Monday, the union
workers authonzed a strike apinst
the Muic Kingdom, he said.
HB SUED OVER LANDFILL FLAP •.• •VromAl .
for another 12 months.
The moratonums, according to
Gardner, circumvented the courts
and depnvcd the Asterx company,
which bought out Coneu's share of
the joint venture earlier this year, of
its interests without compensauon
City officials were unavailable for
comment today.
They extended the moratorium on
extraction work Sept. 4 citing fears
that excavation may pose health
hazards to neighbors.
Another reason for the mora-
torium, they said. is to give them time
to develop an ordinance that will
allow the city to share authority over
the landfill with the state Health
Department.
Expected lo be included in that
ordinance is the requirement that
landfill owner Phil Spiller determine
what kind of materials arc in the
murky ponds that arc said to be about
35 feet deep in places.
Refinery wastes from Huntington
Bcar b oil fields were dumped at the
site for about 30 ycan beginning in
the 1940s.
The landfill has been ranked on the
state's list of the 93 worst dump sites.
MEDIAN FLAP IN HUNTINGTON •••
From Al
order to talk to the right person,"
Phillips said. "City staff member~ do
what they want to do. They don't
have consideration for anbody."
Street, just north of Stark Street-the
entrance to most of the Huntington
Riviera condomiruums.
complex under present conditions.
City officials arc scheduled to meet
with the residents on Thursday.
But city Traffic Engineer Bruce
Gilmer said today the median is part
of a major upgradtn1 of Bolsa Chica
• Street that will tum the porth• uth
road into a six-lane, major arterial
highway.
He claimed that addina a left-hand
tum through the median at Stark
would make driving conditions un-
safe because the two left-hand turns
would be too close together and
motorists wouldn't have sufficient
time to slow to make the tum.
.. At this point, I'm not saying we
will make a cut at Stark Street or that
we won't," Gilmer Said. "We'll be
listening to their concerns."
The road project is exteoding from
Warner A venue just west of
Meadowlark Airpon to 760 feet north
of Heil A venue. The work, expected
to cost about $468,000, will connect
with other street improvements com-
pleted last year.
Gilmer Slld the residents weren't
notified because of an apparent
oversight.
He said there 1s a left-tum at Pearce
Gilmer also claimed that fire
vehicles generally would approach
the homes traveling in ~ wuth:erly
direction and could tum right into the
CITRUS KILLER IN FLORIDA •.•
ltromAl
Meanwhile. a federal quarantine
now prevents ship of Aonda citrus
out of that state.
When some citrus areas are found
free of canker, shipments still will be
banned to other citrus producing
states such as California, says Arthur
A. Millecan. chief of the state Depart-
ment of Food and Agriculture pest
exclusion unit.
.. Our 16 border stations have been
alerted to keep a special watch for
citrus fruit or plants that miptt be
brought into the state by visitors,"
Millecan said. "We have always had
the policy of restricting such non-
commercial entry of most fruits and
vegetables, as anyone who has ever
tried to bnng these items through our
stations can attest."
Millecan said that the quarantine
docs not apply to such processed
citrus byproducts as frozen or bulk
juice.
HERPES DRUG SET FOR MARKET? •••
From Al
In a statement released by the
university, Miller said, "The drug
represents a partial answer but not a
cure for the management of herpes."
Also present 10 London was San-
ford Glasky, executive vice president
of Newport Pharmaceuticals. Glasky
saJd he hopes the test results will help
win approval for the druJ from the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
The tests provide new findings
about the effcctJveness of inosiplex
"1n prolongmj the periods between
recurrences of herpes," Glasky said.
the FDA in t 974-75 but lacked the
necessary scientific data. She said the
oompany hopes the UCI results will
help them wm approval this time.
The six-month UCI study involved
76 men and women who had suffered
at least three outbreaks of genital
herpes over the previous six months.
The experiment was double-blind,
mcanin$ neither the researchers nor
1he ~bents knew who was taking
inos1plex and who was talcmg a
placebo dunng the study.
At the end of six months, 5 I
percent of those who took the drug
reported havin& one or no outbreaks.
Only I 9 percent of those who took the
placebo reported similar improve-
ments. At the same time, more of the
placebo takers reported "severe"
outbreaks of herpes durin1 the study
period.
results" on people whose depressed
immune systems make them suscep-
tible to AIDS -acquired immune
deficiency syndrome -said Dr.
Sudhir Gupta, head of immunology
at UC Irvine.
A company spokesman said more
research must be conducted before
the firm will seek FDA approval for
use of inosiplex in AIDS cases.
Inosiplex is licensed in Great Britain
for use against herpes and in France
and West Germany for 1mmuno-
deficiencies, Glas)cy said.
Glasky said Ncwpon Pharma-
ceuticals bas not shown a profit since
its founding in 1968 and has spent
some $1 S million on research and
development of inosiplex.
Luana Kruse, a spokeswoman for
Newport Pharmaceuticals, said today
that the company is preparing its
application for FDA approval of
inosiplex as a treatment for herpes.
Because of the lengthy FDA review
process, she said "conservatively,"
the dn;ig could be available to the
r--;~~--,mrt:JhriTnwrr-vr:::rn:-~~~~~~--1~mw1Hfoire-+tttr~-ttt~men~
However, reports of the UCI study
have dramatically increased interest
10 the company's, the stock nearly
-doobl-ing in the pasi l 0 da.)'..S. On
Monday, 1t closed at $7 a share, with
490,000 shares traded.
She said the company apphed to second test produced "encouragin&
. SMASHUP HURTS TWO •.•
l'romAl
' from a shoulder of the freeway. 1ractor-tra11cr, said police.
The company says the drug
enhances the body's defense systems
by increasmg l)roducrion uf anti-
bodies and the m1grat1on of
pha.eocytes, both of which destroy fore~ substances in the body. It also
1s said to enable killer cells to more
readily identify infected cells and
destroy them.
'·
The Jeep was rear-ended by another
car and sboved into the side of a large
Just Call·
642-6086
No further information was avail-
able this morning.
Wbal do yoa lib aboal ~e Dally Pilot? Wbt don't yoa Uke? Call tbe
namkr at left u41 your meua1e wlll k recorded, transcribed and delivered
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editor OD any topic. Conlributort to our Leuera column mutt include tbtlr
name and telepboae oamkr for verUlcatlon. No clrculatJon calla, please.
Tell •• wbt't on yo r mind.
OAANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
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Publish r
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DRINKING YACHTSMEN 'NO PROBLEM' •••
From Al
accidents involving drugs or alcohol,
some suspect it's as high as a 'hree-
martint lunch.
Lynn Hornberger of the state
Dcpanment of Boatina and Water-
ways says state officials ~timate that
at least SO percent of aJJ boating
accidents arc alcohol related.
"If the data comes back showing
that young people arc involved in a
lot of boating accidents, there will
prQbably be a bill for licensing, just
like with cars.
"If.it comes back and shows that
alcohol is involyed to the ~ we
suspect it is? perhaps there will be a
bill authorizing the suspension or loss
ofa boating license in certain cases,"
says Sanchez.
By contrast, police estimated that
nearly 60 percent of the fatal car
accident across the country can be
directly attributed to drunken driv-Boaters now arc not required to be
ing. About SO,()()() people arc killed licensed.
each.year on the nation's highways. The law also call,.for a SSOO fine for
"In boating (accidents), reporttng reckless operation of a boaHf the
standards are sort ofloosc so it's hard operator is intoxieated. It also allows
to determine what percent of the a S 1,000 fine if the violator is
accidents involve_alcohol. Bw our convicted a second time and if the
feeling 1s that a great many of the sccon<t offense rerultritr a seriou
operators arc pretty messed up," says injury or death.
Marc Sanchez, senior aide to San Harbonnaster GaJe agrees theTC is
Diego Assemblyman Peter Chacon. a dnnk.ing-aod-boattng problem, but
Chacon, a Democrat. sponsored believes it is being overstated in some
legislation r 1:tst year th;it woul,d__,quarters.
toughen laws relauna to drinlun.,and · '· "Some person lacking a boat may
bOatint have stopped off at a happy hour on
The 111, rewritten because it was at the way home. but that doesn't mean
first considered too controversial, he's drunk," Gage says. "The sarne's
resulted in what 1s to be a two-year true with a guy who takes out his boat
study on boating accidents by the and has a beer."
state's boating and waterways depan-Gafe cautions that the harbor
ment. patro is not complacent about drink·
"It basically requires local law mg and boating and will arrest
enforcement agencies to collect and violators. An in..Nxicated operator 1s
report data on accidents as 1t relates to treated much the same as the drunken
alcohol and to the age of the boater," driver.
explains Sanchez. A field sobnety test 1s conducted
and if the operator is arrested, the
harbor patrol can impound the
boater's vessel. More often, though, a
crew member judged to be sober is
allowed to take the boat back to dock.
.. A great many of our enforcement
officers have street ex periencc so they
know what the problems arc," Gage
says.
An inherent problem with spotting
drunken boaters is that it's sometimes
difficult to distinguish the yachtsman
who's three sheets to the wind from
the incxP.Cncnccd boater who is just
weaving his way around.
According to the harbor patrol,
which also oversees boating oper-
ations 1n Dana Point Harbor and
~untington HaYbor. there is an ocean
of difference between the harbors on
the Orange Coast and the speed boat
hangouts like Mission Bay or Lake
Havasu.
Last year on the Colorado River
there were 20 fatalities. In an average
year, there arc J 50 boat accidents and
about 10 deaths on the river, accord-ma to Parker Dam Sheriff's deputy
Robert Baldwin.
"We just don't have that element of
speed here," says Gage. "Plus there
are so many people here with boats
worth a quarter of a million dollars
that they will be more careful."
"The boat," he says, "is their one
true love and they don't want to crack
it up."
I . *
COMPANY /
invites you to celebrate witla us in our
STH ANNUAL OPEN HOUSE PARTY
SEPTEMBER 26th
' 7:00 P.M. "104 10:00 P.M.
JOIN THE· CELEBRATION
NSC'• traditional OPEN HOUSE PARTY kicking off SKI SEASON 84/85
promises to be our most legendary one yet. We've planned an
evening of warmth and good cheer that's full of surprises
for our friends old and new!
• DRAWING for great pnzes including sweaters. stretch pants,
powder 1ackets, parkas, hats, gloves, goggles. sunglasses •
Pl11• Slcie, Bool•, Pol•• an4 81n4itt••·
• PREVIEW FASH ION SHOW of the iatest tn fall and
winter fashions from Nils, Obermeyer. Descente, Roffe, end
lots more.
•SKI VIDEOS
• FREE BEER ANO WINE.
• AVORV GOURMET FOOD surround our
profes 1onal model, porting the hotte t m Season 84/85
silk Md lace longJOhn ,.
COME AND SHARE THE WINTER FESnVAL
AT
N C' It ANNUAi. OPEN HOU PABTVt
...
,
.. . C ·
f lllT 111111
lUESOAY. SEP 1EMBER 2~. rn84 --
OHANGE ':OUNT Y CAL 1f-Of1NIA • '· 1 ~ ~~ r ·
~ry's
COMING/
Beglnnlil• Sept. 30
in the Dally Pilot
Coast
HB teen'sessayon the
first lunar land Ing won
him a flight to Washing-
ton, D.C./ A3
California
Jackson tour organizers
no 'thrillers' to LA area
stadium owners./ A8
Na don
Manhunt continues for
five escaped Kansas
State Penitentiary con-
victs./ A&
Agent Orange tentative
settlement could mean
cash for Viet vets./ A4
World
Tass likens Reagan's
arms talk to a 'vessel
without water.' I A4
Mlnd&:BOd.y
New devices used to
amptlfy or substitute for
sound are Improving
therapy for the hearing
lmpalred./81
When a hysterectomy Is
ordered, how can you be
sure the operation Is
necessary? /81
Sports
Marcus Allen scored four
touchdowns to help keep
the Raiders unbeaten
after four aames Monday night./&~
Newport Harbor's Ho
Truong has been chosen
as the Dally Piiot's Player
of the Week for his part In
tie with Huntington
Beach./C1
Entertainment
"My Sister Eiieen" Is an
e_ojo_yab.!,!l bit of n_ostalgla
at the Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse./83
Baslnese
"" Robot-run factories will
be a fact In the very near
future./84
INDEX
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
California News
Claulfled
Comlc8
Crossword
Death Notices
Horoscope
Ann Lander9
Mind and Body
Mutual Funds
Natlonal News
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log
Publlc Notlcea
Sport•
Stock Marketa
Televtslon
Theaters
Weather
wondNewt
B~
88
A3
04-8
A4
C8-8
88 cs
C5
C7
82
81-2
86
A4 A7
81
A3
05·8
ci-5
87
82
83 A2
A4
e . 1sne .e
on e
IC
Aerobics? It'• a real 4tag
e . 1ne
i ,800 walk off
after union voting
over new contract
., die A111dlt ... ..._
Disneyland WU IU'UCk .,,. moa
than 1,800 ofits S,000 worten mrt,
today after memben of five.......U-
rcje(:ltd a new coatnct o&:r. ._.
m.anaetment said ilhe pert Would
continue operatifta.
The strike WU called at 6 LIL ud
pickets wgt , up immcdi•tdy, iaid
union spoiesDwi Bob Bleiweitl..
.. The purpose of tbe strike is not IO
strike, but to ltt Nck so ~
tiations." be said. "lbey11 be picket-
ing 24 boun a day ...
Discussions with the oompeny
-broke off around midnilbt and
workers were advited to report IO
picket locations at eatranca a.ad exits
to the amu.tement put.
Bul a OisaeylaDd spot.esnwn said
the part's l O Lm. openina M>day
would .not be delayed by tbe strike. .. wr:re ready 10 f<!·" said Al Flores,
supervisor of publicity.
1be park bas a pool of 1,400 non-
union employees, includina super-
visory· personnel and clerb, and
sevttal hundred additional worteri
from WED Entc:q>rises, a desi&ft
division of Walt Dimey Productions.
and a similar number from Disney•s
Studio in Burbank. Flores said.
"Everybody bas been trained.
&crybody m-met th& miAimwa
reqwrement for ~ on attraic-=
lions. which is two days,' Flores sUcL
When the Ma&Jc lloveDRDt Shape-Up Center In eo.ta lleu
held a .. tacky aerobic wear party" Monday oJarht. Bill
Duiilap of ea.ta lleu took them at their word. The Idea wu
for~ to wear tire tackiest aerobic sear tbe7 CCMlld
Ibid, and It loob u thoaiJi Bill ba'd the rl&bt Idea. lla)'be
blonde. do ha•e mor~ fun.
Huntington Beach rcsid.eat
Sharlene Vatider Molen, a DOIMlnion
employee who works in Disoeylancf s
entertainmen1 department; said sbe
and other •'Oiters have been niceiv-
(PleMe .ee Dll!llmT I A2J
Citrus pestilence in Florida
concerns California growers
Authorities in OC
keeping a close watch
for fruit tree killer
From 1taff and wire report•
A citrus disease which is deci-
mating nurseries in Aorida has never
been found in California and steps are
beinJ taken to make sure the
pestilence doesn't move west.
"There is a real concern it might
come this way," said Jim Harnett. an
agriculture commissioner in Orange
County.
"We don't need any more diseases
out here and particularly one we don't
know anything about," said Harnett.
"It could be a major problem if it got
here."
Orange County, living up to its The disease plaguing F1orida fruit
namesake, is rich m orange producing growers is known as the citrus canker
acreage. There are more than S,200 disease, which attacks the leaves of
acres planted in orange trees, nearly fruit-bearing trees. Growers in
900 acres o(icmons and more than · Aorida have been· burning entire
300 acres of trees producing orchards to eliminate the pestilence.
grapefruit. (Pleue .ee CITRUS/ A2)
Mary Jo Voit rites today
Memorial services were scheduled
this afternoon for Mary Jo Voit,
Balboa Island resident and widow of
Voit Rubber Corp. founder Willard
D. Voit.
Mrs. Voit died Saturday at Hoag
Memorial Hospital. She was 72.
The Voits were long-time sup-
porters of Hoag, where· Mr. Voit
served on the board of directors and
as pre$ident of the private Hoag
Foundation. Mrs. Voit continued as a
benefactor of the hospital after her
husband·s death of cancer in 1980.
The Willard D. Voit MenfOrial
(Pleue eee VOIT/ A2)
Laguna alien finds
once burned, twice
burned again
By DAVID BISHOP
o.1r"'-c.1 I ....
Laguna Beach police arc in-
vestigating a Santa Ana escort
service that all~y-twicc rob-
bed a man who initially was too
afraid to report the crimes.
A male Mexican, an un-
documented worker, who lives in
a small apartment on Griffith
Way in Laguna, called the escort
service -believed to be a front
for prostitution -to invite a
woman to his rcsidentt on Sept.
17, Sgt. Alex Jimenez said.
Shortly after the woman left,
two black men showed up at the
semi-secluded apartment Ud
took. $350 in . cash from tbe
Mexican at suitpoint, Jimenez.
The victim, in his mid-20s, did
not report the crime because be ~deportation. Jimenez sUd.
A week after the first incident
the man called the escort service
again and asked for two call..pts
this time. They arrived Monday
afternoon. Later that niibt two
black men armed with IUDS
arrived while the women were
still inside with the victim. ThiS
time, they took S 150 in cash,
which is all the man said be ~
(Pleue eee LAGUJllA/ AS)
Have UCI researchers conquered herpes?
Local marketTn firm hopes to nave fnosTplex--m-la~si~::i ~n: h~s-::J
in U.S. pharmacies after •encouraging' tests AIDS dunng which Dr. R. David Miller, who co-<lirected the UCI
From staff and wire reports
A Newport Beach company that
markets the drua inosiplex abroad
hopes to put it on U.S. pharmacy
shelves after getting "encouraa,ina"
results in treating herpes and an
affliction similar to AIDS.
The herpes study was conducted by
researchers at UC Irvine.
Newport Pharmaceuticals Inter-
national. Inc .. announced today in
London the results of recent tests of
the drug, whkh is sold pnmarily
under the name lsoprinosmc in 72
countries includin& Britain, Fonce
and West Germany.
herpes study, discussed his test re-
sults.
Also present was Sanford Glasky,
executive vice president of Newport
Pharmaceuticals. Glasky sajd he
hopes the test results will help win
approval for the dru' from the U.S.
Food and Drug A<lnrinistration.
The tests provide new findlAAl>
Getting hig on-the seas -
not like drunken driving
Newport Harbor .'cruising and bOozin '
doesn't present law enforcement problem
If Newport Harbor is the bt t
ha pp) hour on the Orange Coast."' h~ iJ 11 that harbor patrolmen ha\c not
made one drun"cn boat1naia~1 this w'!
To bcfin. drinking while opcratin
a boat 1 not 11lcpl. manini 1s
tandud equipmcn1 to on1c
)'IChtsmcn and a C1l ortwo of been
n 51ry fuel for o&h n ttin out
on a da)'long :sat I.
Newport Hamor. af\cr 11. 1 th
bout ~f inosiplcx
"in prolongina the periods between
recurrences of herpes," Glasky said.
Luana Kruse. a pokcswoman for
Newport Pharmaceuticals, said today
that the firm as preparing its appli-
cation for FDA approval ofinos1p1ex
as a treatment for herpes. Because of
the lengthy FDA review process, she
said "conservativdy," the dru& could
be a vailabk to the public in two )cars.
Beyond the herpes e-<periment. a
second test producCd "encouraging
STEVE
MARIL£
-
PERSPECTI\[
resultt" on ~-whose -dcpcc:llCd-........ ~
immune systems ma.kc tbem suscep-
tible to AIDS -~uired immuoc
deficiency syndrome -said Or:
Sudhir Gupta, head of immunolOcY
at UC Irvine.
Glasky said Newpon Pharn\lii.
ccuticals has not turned a profit since
ats founding in J 968 and has spent
some SIS million op rcseartb an4
development of inosiplcx.
InOSiplu is li<:ensed in Britain ftir
~Seue ... asltPD/UJ
Freeway
smashup
hurts two
•
• ...
By TONl', AA\'EDRA 10 a lawsuit filed la t week in U.S.
otiMCWJNtlllatf O~Str'!Ct Col!rt of vio_latiog her con-
More.oomplaint1m ybe ddedtoa stttuuon l n 1 to puvacy as well as fi Jcral it filed by a former Hunt-. hernghttoduoproccssunderthelaw.
mston Beach w;om n apinst the city Repici said the 25-year-old woman
of p ta M and ~ an e •rt5Cf'\.e was repeated!) telephoned by Thayer
police officer who the woman claims after he helped a rqular officer arrest
oftcrcd to get a drunken drivina her on a charge of drunken driving in
char&e against her di mi d if he December.
would have "personal rtlations .. with
him.
Newport Beach altornc) Rk rd
Rcpici said he is continuina a private
anvestigation into the alleitd hantss~
\ment 'Of Bonita Lynn Loa.~on b)
lbrmer reserve officer Michael
hayer. That investigation, said Re-
;pici1 could lead to,morc civil charses
pan t the city and the cx.-officer.
whoformcrlywasajailerwlth lhe Los
Af\8ClCS County bcriff s Dc~rt
mcnt.
Logsdon already has accu~d them
.. He b: ically said, 'Go out with
me: carry on person I relations with
me and I won't appear (in coun) on
the case,"' said Repici, who tape-
recorded -with the consent of the
district attorney's office -one of the
officer' calls.
.: The suit docs not pccify a monet·
ary damages. but the woman had
previously filed a S 1 million cJaim
against the City. The city denied the
claim. .
Thedrunkendminacharaeagainst
Thayer, fi cmg d15Clplinary act1<ln
from the pahcc dcpanment1 resigned
from h1 part-time Job in January,
id Pohce q1iefR~er NeJh .
"l probabl) would have terminatc<l
him an~way," ~id Neth. He added
that cnminal charges were never
brought against Thllyer because du;.
trict attorney's investiptors con·
eluded there was 1nsuffic1cnt
'evidence.
The alleged harassment by Tha)'cr
was followed b) a similar case
involvina another Costa Mesa police
Officer, William Lauchlan. who was
fired and later convicted on ch&flC
that he molested a woman mo1on~t
he had pulled ov~ in Januar).
(
Clear skies w·th warmer days
Tides
TODAY •10pll' 01
10 ltpll! 11.t
WIDNHDAY
•'Zllam ..02 ON am 12
•lllpm 01 110tpmS3
Sun -IOdey .C & 41 Pl'l •-W-'-81 &t I 44 a ~ and MU ll08ift
atl44p111 Moon .... toeleY at'7.;30 Pfll , .... W~y at I ·,,. &.Ill and ..U ~
MI04p.111
Temperatures
If .. u 40 ... 9 .. • eo H Yt 11 ,, ., s
11 ... • . u ~ u Cl H
Ila 3J ..
to " ., 74 .. .. llO 40 -9S .,,
71 ..
77 .. ... 71 11 eo ., .. .. .. 47 • 66 40 71 .,
., •t
12 70 ti 11
.. •72 ... ..
7t 17 ....
-DISNEY WORKERS WALK OFF JOB •••
HI Le
12 ... 15 6i tl •2
51 <18
16 .. .. 72 ., 7•
II II 14 II
~7 ,.
Extended
Im
1·2
1·2
1·2
From Al
inf. tr.lining to take over for strikers.
'I'll be scllinJ merchandise in
Fantasyland," said Vander Molen,
who normally dresses an custume and
plays the role of a Disney cartoon
-character. She said company rules
prohibit her from saying which
character she plays.
She said she is not womed about
c;rossing picket lines.
• "But I haven't done it yet either,"
Jo headded.
-The supervisory personnel were
fdriwn from 14of1 7 diVisional offices
·n and behind the scenes at lhe park.
Those offices were to be closed, which
would affect planniDJ 1f the strike
were drawn out. he said.
Contrary to some media reports,
, there were no plans to bnng in
, employees from Disneyworld in
· Florida or Tokyo's Disneyland,
'Flores said.
Union worlcers representmaa lhird ·.
of Disneyland's employees turned
down the company's latest offer on
Monday, a week after voting down a
pay-freeze contract the company
propascd, said United Food aild
Comme~l Workers spokesman
Michael O'Rourke.
The offer included a reduced pay-
frccze demand -two years in.stead of •
three years-and a ••grandfatherill$"
provision. Under the offer, certain
health and welfare benefits, seniority
andjob security provisjons would be
maintained for current employees,
but not for new employees, officials
said.
With 69.25 percent votin_g against
the contract Monday, ttie union
workers aulhonzcd a strike against
the Magic ~n&dom, he said.
A Disneyland spokesman said
Monday night it had been .. very
djfficult to call" whether the unions
would accept or reject the contract
·.CITRUS KILLER •••
From Al
The Cahfornaa Department of
Agriculture Monday dispatched five
plant pathologists to Florida to help
authontics detect and eradicate the
citrus canker lhat could cnpple or k.111
the state's ettrus crop.
Meanwhile, a federaJ quarantine
now prevents ship of Florida dtrus
out of that state.
When some citrus areas arc found
free of canker, shipments still will be
banned to other citrus productng
states such as California, says Arthur
A. Millecan, chjefofthe state Depart-
ment of Food and Agnculture pest
exclusion unit.
"Our 16 border stations have been
HERPES ••.
From Al
use against herpes and in France and
West Germany for 1mmun~etic1en
c1es, Glasky said.
The company says the drug
enhances the body's defense systems
by mcreasmg production of anti-
bodies and the migration of
phaiocytes. bolh of which destroy
foreign substances m the body.
It also 1s said to enable killer cells to
1dent1fy infected cells more readily
and destroy them
AIDS. a fatal disease that sup-
presses the body's immune system.
has killed 2. 705 people m the United
States, most of them homosexuals.
natives of Haiti, intravenous drug
, abusers and hemophihacs.
Herpes 1s not fatal but is spread
each )car to hundreds of thousands of
new victims mostly by sexual contact
It causes outbreaks of painful sores
and currently affects between five
m1lhon and 20m1U1on US. residents
according to the Centers for Disease
Control in Atlanta •
alerted to keep a special watch for
citrus fruit or plants that mi$ht be
brought into the state by visitors,"
Millccan said. "We have always had
the policy of restnclllng such non-
commercial entry of most fruits and
vegetables, as anyone who has ever
tned to bnna lhcse items through our
stallons can attest."
Millccan sa1d that the quarantme
docs not apply to such processed
citrus byproducts as frozen or bulk
JUiee.
VOIT •..
From Al
Radiology Department was named
for Mr. Vou on his death.
Mrs. Von, born 1n Ohio on May 13.
1912. was a member of the Alpha
Delta Phi soronty and the Newpon
Harbor Yacht Oub. She and her
husband moved to Balboa Island in
1957. .
Mr. Voit founded the Voit Rubber
Corp., which merged m 1957 with the
AMF Sporting Goods Co. Mr. Voit
continued as president· of the Voat
d1v1s1on until 1960 and as chairman
of the board until his retirement in
1970.
Mrs. Voit 1s survived by her sons.
Willa.rd S. and Richard A., of New-
port Beach, and Robert D., of Encino;
her mother, Bessie Stimson, of New-
port; and two grandchildren, Richard
and Roben.
The family requested that con-
tributions be made in Mrs. Voit's
name to the Willard D. Voit Radio-
logy Department of Hoaa Hospital.
The memonal service was to be
held today 4 pm. at Pacific View
Memorial Park m Newport Beach. A
pnvate bunal was planned at Pacific
View.
I SMASHUP HURTS TWO ••.
O'Rourk.e said 1,400 of the 1,844
union members whose contracts arc
bema negoti.ated voted Monday.
The negative vote followed a
recommendation by union leaders,
who said that although the Dis-
neyland offer contained improve-
ments over the package a week ago, 1t
still called for concessions.
,
1·2 1-2
M! s..a dln!Gtoon -ttl'llWt
DRINKING YACHTSMEN 'NO PROBLEM' ••• ·
From Al
"Rejection was recommended, but
improvements m the proposal were
noted," Bleiweiss said. Last week's
proposal was voted down by 97
percent of the uniorusts. In earlier proposals, Disneyland accidents mvoh mg drugs or alcohol, .. lf the data comes back showing and 1f the operator 1s arrested. the
had sought reductions in fringe some suspect n's as high as a three-that young people are involved in a harbor patrol can impound the
balefits, C$J>CCtally for pan-umers. manini lunch. lot of boating accidents, there will boater's vessel. More often, thoua,h. a
and h.ad sought more freedom to Lynn Hornberger of the state probably be a bill for li censing. ju!lt crew member Judged to be sober 1s
move workers between different Department of Boating and Water-like with cars. allowed to take the boat back to dock.
classifications. ways says state officials estimate that "If 1t comes back and shows that "A great many of our entorcement
The negotiations covers workers, at least 50 percent of all boaung alcohol is involved to the degree we officers have street experience so they
from Janitors to salespeople to ride accidents are alcohol related. suspect tt is, perhaps there will be a know what the probJems arc," Gage
operators represented by five unions. bill authorizing the suspension or loss They arc represented by the By contrast, police estimated that of a boating license in cert.am cases." says.
UFCW. the Service Employees Inter-nearly 60 percent of the fatal car says Sanchez. An mherent problem with potting
national Union, Teamsters, Bakery accidents across the country can be drunken boaters is that it's sometimes
and Confectjonery Workers, and directly attributed to drunk.en dnv-Boaters now arc not required to be difficult to distinguish lhe yachtsman
HOlel Employees and Restaurant mg. About 50,000 people arc killed. licensed. who's three sheets to the wind from
Emplo)ee!I Union. each year on the nation s hi&hways. The law al~ calls for a$500 tine for thc·mexperienccd boater who is JUSt
Disneyland has a total of 5.000 "ln boating (accidents). reporting reckless operation of 1 boat if the weaving his wa> around.
workers, about 3,500 of whom are standards are son ofloosc ~it's hard operator is antox.1cated. It also aJlows According to the harbor patrol,
members of 26 unions. to detenmne what percent of the a $1,000 fine if the violator 1s h ch also o ersees boau·na O""" Theo'd contrac•e..,n.ired la .. • week. d w 1 v · -r· ' .. ,..,~ ... accidents-involve afcohol. But -Gur convitte a second tim.c..and..i.f the <ltions in Dana--Petnt Harbor and
Under It, workers got between S7 and feeling 1s that a great many of the second off en st results in a serious Huntington Harbor, there is an ocean
$10 an hour -more than lhe $6.90 operators arc prett) messed up," says injury or death. of difference between the harbors on
an hour industry average for similar Marc Sanchez. senior aide to San H bo G · the Orange Coast and the s~ boat • D I nd ffi · I d ar rmaster aae agrees there 1s .,.. ...... wor..... isney a 0 ict.a s 581 · Diego .\ssembl)man Peter Chacon a drink.ing·and-boatfng problem, but hangout like Mi Jion Bay or Lake D1snerland h.as been beset by bel" be" d · Hava~u. tinanc1a problems stemming from a Chacon. a Democrat. sponsored teve!dt is mg over tate m some
three-year dip m attendance. and a legislation last year that would quarters. Last year on the Colorado River
sharp drop dunng this summer"s toughen laws relating to dnnking and '"Some person lacking a boat ma) there were 20 fatahties. ln an avCTage
Olympic Games 10 Los Angeles. boatint have stopped off at a happy hour on year. lherc are 150 boat accidents and
In add1uon. Walt Disney Pro-The 111, rewnttcn because 11 was at the way home, but that doesn't mean about I 0 deaths on the river. accord-
ductions Inc. has undergone a man-first considered too controversial. he's drunk," Gage says. "The samc's ing to Parker Dam Sheriffs deputy
agement shuffle, and has been threat-resulted m what 1s to be a two-year true wt th a &UY who takes out his boat Robert Baldwin.
ened by takeovers by outside in-study on boating accidents by the and has a beer." "Wejustdon'thavethatelementof
vestors. state's boating and waterways depart-Gage cautions that the harbor speed he~." says Gage. "Plus there
Since opening 29 years ago, Dis-ment. patrol is not complace nt about dnnk-arc so many people here with boats
neyland has been struck twice, in "lt basically requires local law 1ng and boating and will arrest worth a quarter of a million dollars
1979, when 500 maincnaocc workers enforcement agencies to collect and violators. An intoxicated operator is that they will be more careful.••
walked off the JOb for 13 days. and m repon data on accidents as It relates to treated much the same as tbc drunken "'The boat." he says, "is their one
1970 when two dozen talent workers alcohol and to the age of the boater," dnver. truelove and they don't want to crack
struck for two days. explains Sanchez. A field sobriety test is conducted it up."
Scpa rate ncgo t ia ti o ns con tin ued · jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiii~iiiiiill!ilm-lllll!ll•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiliiiiiiliii•••illll•• meanwhile, with about 2.600 main-
tenance workers at Disney World m
Lake Buena Vista, Fla., cqmpany
spokesman Charlie Ridgeway said
Monday. That contract explres Oct.
I.
LAGUNA .••
From Al
and his television set.
"'To make 1t look good, they said
they were taking the girls alonJ and
would dump them off by the side of
the freeway." Jiminez said. The
Mexican later told police one of the
black men was also involved m the
earher burglary. he added.
Pohcc first learned of the robbery
when the v1cttm's landlord reported
ll.
The v1ct1m, who has worked in a
Laauna Beach restaurant for about a
year. is now cooperating with pohce
m the investigation.
I .
COMPANY*
invites you to celebrate with us in our
8TH ANNUAL OPEN HOUSE PARTY
SEPTEMBER 26th
7:00 P .M. to 10:00 P.M.
JOIN THE CELEBRATION
NSC'• trad1ttonal OPEN HOUSE PARTY kicking off SKI SEASON 84/85
promises to be our most legendary one yet. We've planned an
evening of warmth and good cneer that's full of surprises
for our friends old ana new! --.-
-
From.Al
The Mexican still does not believe
there is a connection bcfween the call
girls and the robbers. Jimine1 said.
although police are almost ccnain
they are linked. • DRAWING for great pr1zes including sweaters. stretch pants,
powder iackets. parkas, hats, gloves, goggles, sunglasses
. .
I· W-om a shoulder of the frecwa). tractor-trailer. $81d police. The investlpt1on is centered on
everal Santa Ana telephone
numbers. Jimenez said.
1• •.
The Jeep was rear-ended by another
~rand hoved into the side of a large No further information was avail·
able this morning.
WE'RE LISTENING
Just Call
642-6086
What do you Hilt about tbe Dally Pilot? Wbat don't ~·oo like" Call tbe
number at left and your meuage wlll be recorded, transcribed and deltnred
to the appropriate edltor.
Tbt same t4·boar answering service may be used to record leUert to tbe
editor on any topic. Coatrlbators to our Letten c:olarnD must include tbelr
name and teltpboae oombtr for vertflcatJoo. No circulation calls, please.
Tell 11 wbat'• o~ your mlDd.
D1J1y Pilot
o.Uvery
11 OuarantMCt
ORANGE GOAST
Daily Pilat
' H. L. Schwartz Ill
Publisher
RoHmary Churchman
Control! r
' \..
Stephen F. Cuazo
Produchon
Manager
Donald L. Wllllam1
C rculatron
Monager
ClrculaUon 714/142-4333
Clattlfied advert11lng 714/942·5171
AU other de.,.rtm•nt1 642-4321
MAIN OFFICE
Plu. S•i•, Boot•, Pof u and Binding•.
• PREVIEW FASHION SHOW of the latest in fall and
winter rash1ons from Nill>, Obermeyer, Descente, Roffe, a1iCf
lots more.
•SKI VIDEOS . . • FREE 8 ER AND WINE.
• SAVORY GOURM T FOODS surround our
professional mOdel, 'porting the hottest tn Se,1sCJn 84/85
Siik nnd lace long)C>hn
COME ANO HARF. TH WINT R FE TIVAL AT
N C'S tit ANNVAL OP N HOU PARTY/